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. 1994 Aug 25;370(6491):652-5.
doi: 10.1038/370652a0.

Inhibition of endocytosis by elevated internal calcium in a synaptic terminal

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Inhibition of endocytosis by elevated internal calcium in a synaptic terminal

H von Gersdorff et al. Nature. .

Abstract

During synaptic transmission in the nervous system, synaptic vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane of presynaptic terminals, releasing neurotransmitter by exocytosis. The vesicle membrane is then retrieved by endocytosis and recycled into new transmitter-containing vesicles. Exocytosis in synaptic terminals is calcium-dependent, and we now report that endocytosis also is regulated by the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i). Capacitance measurements in synaptic terminals of retinal bipolar neurons revealed that endocytosis was strongly inhibited by elevated [Ca2+]i in the range achieved by Ca(2+)-current activation. The rate of membrane retrieval was steeply dependent on [Ca2+]i, with a Hill coefficient of 4 and half-inhibition at approximately 500 nM. At [Ca2+]i > or = 900 nM, endocytosis was entirely absent. The action of internal calcium on endocytosis represents a novel negative-feedback mechanism controlling the rate of membrane recovery in synaptic terminals after neurotransmitter secretion. As membrane retrieval is the first step in vesicle recycling, this mechanism may contribute to activity-dependent synaptic depression.

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