Acute Complexin Knockout Abates Spontaneous and Evoked Transmitter Release

2019 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Acute Complexin Knockout Abates Spontaneous and Evoked Transmitter Release​
López-Murcia, F. J.; Reim, K.; Jahn, O. ; Taschenberger, H. & Brose, N. ​ (2019) 
Cell Reports26(10) art. 2530.e5​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2019.02.030 

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Authors
López-Murcia, Francisco José; Reim, Kerstin; Jahn, Olaf ; Taschenberger, Holger; Brose, Nils 
Abstract
SNARE-mediated synaptic vesicle (SV) fusion is controlled by multiple regulatory proteins that determine neurotransmitter release efficiency. Complexins are essential SNARE regulators whose mode of action is unclear, as available evidence indicates positive SV fusion facilitation and negative "fusion clamp"-like activities, with the latter occurring only in certain contexts. Because these contradictory findings likely originate in part from different experimental perturbation strategies, we attempted to resolve them by examining a conditional complexin-knockout mouse line as the most stringent genetic perturbation model available. We found that acute complexin loss after synaptogenesis in autaptic and mass-cultured hippocampal neurons reduces SV fusion probability and thus abates the rates of spontaneous, synchronous, asynchronous, and delayed transmitter release but does not affect SV priming or cause "unclamping" of spontaneous SV fusion. Thus, complexins act as facilitators of SV fusion but are dispensable for "fusion clamping" in mammalian forebrain neurons.
Issue Date
2019
Journal
Cell Reports 
Project
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/670283/EU//SYNPRIME
ISSN
2211-1247
Language
English

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