Synaptic Vesicle Depletion Correlates with Attenuated Synaptic Responses to Prolonged Repetitive Stimulation in Mice Lacking α-Synuclein

Deborah E. Cabin, Kazuhiro Shimazu(Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development), Diane Murphy(National Human Genome Research Institute), Nelson B. Cole, Wolfram Gottschalk(Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development), Kellie L. McIlwain(Baylor College of Medicine), Bonnie M. Orrison, Amy Chen, Christopher E. Ellis, Richard Paylor(Baylor College of Medicine), Bai Lu(Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development), Robert L. Nussbaum
Journal of Neuroscience
October 15, 2002
Cited by 854Open Access
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Abstract

Although the mutation of -synuclein, a protein associated with presynaptic vesicles, is implicated in the etiology and pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease, the biological function of the normal protein is unknown. Mice that lack -synuclein have been generated by homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells. Electron microscopic examination of hippocampal synapses revealed a striking selective deficiency of undocked vesicles without affecting docked vesicles. Field recording of CA1 synapses in hippocampal slices from the mutant mice demonstrated normal basal synaptic transmission, pairedpulse facilitation, and response to a brief train of high-frequency stimulation (100 Hz, 40 pulses) that exhausts only docked vesicles. In contrast, the -synuclein knock-out mice exhibited significant impairments in synaptic response to a prolonged train of repetitive stimulation (12.5 Hz, 300 pulses) capable of depleting docked as well as reserve pool vesicles. Moreover, the replenishment of the docked vesicles by reserve pool vesicles after depletion was slower in the mutant synapses. Thus, -synuclein may be required for the genesis and/or maintenance of a subset of presynaptic vesicles, those in the "reserve" or "resting" pools. These results reveal, for the first time, the normal function of endogenous -synuclein in regulating synaptic vesicle mobilization at nerve terminals.


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