Hypertonic enhancement of transmitter release from frog motor nerve terminals: Ca2+ independence and role of integrins
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 530 (2), 243-252
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.2001.0243l.x
Abstract
Hyperosmotic solutions cause markedly enhanced spontaneous quantal release of neurotransmitter from many nerve terminals. The mechanism of this enhancement is unknown. We have investigated this phenomenon at the frog neuromuscular junction with the aim of determining the degree to which it resembles the modulation of release by stretch, which has been shown to be mediated by mechanical tension on integrins. The hypertonicity enhancement, like the stretch effect, does not require Ca2+ influx or release from internal stores, although internal release may contribute to the effect. The hypertonicity effect is sharply reduced (but not eliminated) by peptides containing the RGD sequence, which compete with native ligands for integrin bonds. There is co-variance in the magnitude of the stretch and osmotic effects; that is, individual terminals exhibiting a large stretch effect also show strong enhancement by hypertonicity, and vice versa. The stretch and osmotic enhancements also can partially occlude each other. There remain some clear-cut differences between osmotic and stretch forms of modulation: the larger range of enhancement by hypertonic solutions, the relative lack of effect of osmolarity on evoked release, and the reported higher temperature sensitivity of osmotic enhancement. Nevertheless, our data strongly implicate integrins in a significant fraction of the osmotic enhancement, possibly acting via the same mechanism as stretch modulation.Keywords
This publication has 66 references indexed in Scilit:
- Steering estrogen signals from the plasma membrane to the nucleus: Two sides of the coinJournal of Cellular Physiology, 2005
- Definition of the Readily Releasable Pool of Vesicles at Hippocampal SynapsesNeuron, 1996
- Estimates for the pool size of releasable quanta at a single central synapse and for the time required to refill the pool.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Integrins: Versatility, modulation, and signaling in cell adhesionCell, 1992
- Role of integrin receptors in manganese-dependent BHK cell spreading on albumin-coated substrataExperimental Cell Research, 1991
- Extracellular Matrix Molecules and their Receptors: Functions in Neural DevelopmentAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1991
- Transmitter release at frog end-plate loaded with a Ca2+-chelator, BAPTA: hypertonicity and erythrosin B augment the release independently of internal Ca2+Neuroscience Letters, 1988
- Filopodia, lamellipodia and retractions at mouse neuromuscular junctionsJournal of Neurocytology, 1988
- Is hyperosmotic neurosecretion from motor nerve endings a calcium-dependent process?Nature, 1977
- Calcium: Is It Required for Transmitter Secretion?Science, 1971