From the early periods of neurogenesis and migration, up until synaptogenesis, both nitric oxide (NO) and its downstream messenger, cGMP, are thought to influence the development of neurons. The NO/cGMP/cGMP-dependent protein kinase (cGK) pathway regulates the clustering and recruitment of synaptic proteins and vesicles to the synapse, adjusting the exoendocytic cycle to the intensity of activity and accelerating endocytosis following large-scale exocytosis. Here, we show that blockage of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor impairs the cycling of synaptic vesicles in a subset of boutons on cerebellar granule cells, an effect that was reversed by increasing cGMP. Furthermore, we demonstrate that presynaptic cGK type II (cGKII) plays a major role in this process. Using the FM1-43 dye to track vesicle recycling, we found that knockdown of cGKII and/or the application of a cGK inhibitor reduced the efficiency of synaptic vesicle recycling to a similar extent. Likewise, in cerebellar granule cells transfected with vGlut1-pHluorin to follow the exoendocytotic cycle, application of a cGK inhibitor slowed vesicle endocytosis when exocytosis was accelerated through strong and sustained stimulation. Additionally, ultrastructural analysis showed that cGKII knockdown or inhibition favored the formation of endosomal-like structures after strong and sustained stimulation. We conclude that cGKII controls the homeostatic balance of vesicle exocytosis and endocytosis in synaptic boutons of rat cerebellar granule cells.
Neurotransmitter release is driven by Ca influx at synaptic boutons that acts on synaptic vesicles ready to undergo exocytosis. Neurotransmitter release is inhibited when metabotropic glutamate type 7 (mGlu ) receptors provoke a reduction in Ca influx, although the reduced release from synapses lacking this receptor suggests that they may also prime synaptic vesicles for release. These mGlu receptors activate phospholipase C (PLC) and generate inositol trisphosphate, which in turn releases Ca from intracellular stores and produces diacylglycerol (DAG), an activator of proteins containing DAG-binding domains such as Munc13 and protein kinase C (PKC). However, the full effects of mGlu receptor signalling on synaptic transmission are unclear. We found that prolonged activation of mGlu receptors with the agonist l-AP4 first reduces and then enhances the amplitude of EPSCs, a presynaptic effect that changes the frequency but not the amplitude of the mEPSCs and the paired pulse ratio. Pertussis toxin blocks the inhibitory response, while the PLC inhibitor U73122, and the inhibitor of DAG binding calphostin C, prevent receptor mediated potentiation. Moreover, this DAG-dependent potentiation of the release machinery brings more synaptic vesicles closer to the active zone plasma membrane in a Munc13-2- and RIM1α-dependent manner. Electrically evoked release of glutamate that activates mGlu receptors also bidirectionally modulates synaptic transmission. In these conditions, potentiation now occurs rapidly and it overcomes any inhibition, such that potentiation prevails unless it is suppressed with the PLC inhibitor U73122.
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