|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Slow AMPAR Synaptic Transmission Is Determined by Stargazin and Glutamate Transporters.

First Author  Lu HW Year  2017
Journal  Neuron Volume  96
Issue  1 Pages  73-80.e4
PubMed ID  28919175 Mgi Jnum  J:256112
Mgi Id  MGI:6114578 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2017.08.043
Citation  Lu HW, et al. (2017) Slow AMPAR Synaptic Transmission Is Determined by Stargazin and Glutamate Transporters. Neuron 96(1):73-80.e4
abstractText  AMPARs mediate the briefest synaptic currents in the brain by virtue of their rapid gating kinetics. However, at the mossy fiber-to-unipolar brush cell synapse in the cerebellum, AMPAR-mediated EPSCs last for hundreds of milliseconds, and it has been proposed that this time course reflects slow diffusion from a complex synaptic space. We show that upon release of glutamate, synaptic AMPARs were desensitized by transmitter by >90%. As glutamate levels subsequently fell, recovery of transmission occurred due to the presence of the AMPAR accessory protein stargazin that enhances the AMPAR response to low levels of transmitter. This gradual increase in receptor activity following desensitization accounted for the majority of synaptic transmission at this synapse. Moreover, the amplitude, duration, and shape of the synaptic response was tightly controlled by plasma membrane glutamate transporters, indicating that clearance of synaptic glutamate during the slow EPSC is dictated by an uptake process.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

6 Bio Entities

0 Expression