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Publication : An isolated pool of vesicles recycles at rest and drives spontaneous neurotransmission.

First Author  Sara Y Year  2005
Journal  Neuron Volume  45
Issue  4 Pages  563-73
PubMed ID  15721242 Mgi Jnum  J:124422
Mgi Id  MGI:3721494 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2004.12.056
Citation  Sara Y, et al. (2005) An isolated pool of vesicles recycles at rest and drives spontaneous neurotransmission. Neuron 45(4):563-73
abstractText  Spontaneous synaptic vesicle fusion is a common property of all synapses. To trace the origin of spontaneously fused vesicles in hippocampal synapses, we tagged vesicles with fluorescent styryl dyes, antibodies against synaptotagmin-1, or horseradish peroxidase. We could show that synaptic vesicles recycle at rest, and after spontaneous exo-endocytosis, they populate a reluctantly releasable pool of limited size. Interestingly, vesicles in this spontaneously labeled pool were more likely to re-fuse spontaneously compared to vesicles labeled with activity. We found that blocking vesicle refilling at rest selectively depleted neurotransmitter from spontaneously fusing vesicles without significantly altering evoked transmission. Furthermore, in the absence of the vesicle SNARE protein synaptobrevin (VAMP), activity-dependent and spontaneously recycling vesicles could mix, suggesting a role for synaptobrevin in the separation of the two pools. Taken together these results suggest that spontaneously recycling vesicles and activity-dependent recycling vesicles originate from distinct pools with limited cross-talk with each other.
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