| First Author | Xu J | Year | 2009 |
| Journal | Nat Neurosci | Volume | 12 |
| Issue | 6 | Pages | 759-66 |
| PubMed ID | 19412166 | Mgi Jnum | J:161265 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:4457855 | Doi | 10.1038/nn.2320 |
| Citation | Xu J, et al. (2009) Synaptotagmin-1 functions as a Ca2+ sensor for spontaneous release. Nat Neurosci 12(6):759-66 |
| abstractText | Spontaneous 'mini' release occurs at all synapses, but its nature remains enigmatic. We found that >95% of spontaneous release in murine cortical neurons was induced by Ca2+-binding to synaptotagmin-1 (Syt1), the Ca2+ sensor for fast synchronous neurotransmitter release. Thus, spontaneous and evoked release used the same Ca2+-dependent release mechanism. As a consequence, Syt1 mutations that altered its Ca2+ affinity altered spontaneous and evoked release correspondingly. Paradoxically, Syt1 deletions (as opposed to point mutations) massively increased spontaneous release. This increased spontaneous release remained Ca2+ dependent but was activated at lower Ca2+ concentrations and with a lower Ca2+ cooperativity than synaptotagmin-driven spontaneous release. Thus, in addition to serving as a Ca2+ sensor for spontaneous and evoked release, Syt1 clamped a second, more sensitive Ca2+ sensor for spontaneous release that resembles the Ca2+ sensor for evoked asynchronous release. These data suggest that Syt1 controls both evoked and spontaneous release at a synapse as a simultaneous Ca2+-dependent activator and clamp of exocytosis. |