Dolly_1984_J.Physiol.(Paris)_79_280

Reference

Title : Botulinum neurotoxin and dendrotoxin as probes for studies on transmitter release - Dolly_1984_J.Physiol.(Paris)_79_280
Author(s) : Dolly JO , Halliwell JV , Black JD , Williams RS , Pelchen-Matthews A , Breeze AL , Mehraban F , Othman IB , Black AR
Ref : Journal de Physiologie (Paris) , 79 :280 , 1984
Abstract :

Acceptors for BoNT have been detected autoradiographically on the terminal membrane of motor nerves at a density of approximately 150/micron2 and shown to mediate toxin internalization, a process deemed essential for its inhibition of transmitter release. DTX, a protein with pronounced central neurotoxicity, was shown to induce convulsive states in hippocampal slices from guinea-pig. Synaptic transmission was facilitated and spontaneous epileptiform activity produced in intact cell populations. Voltage clamp analysis of hippocampal neurones revealed that DTX specifically attenuated a transient voltage-dependent K+ conductance (A-current) and this could account for the excitatory effects observed. Proteinaceous acceptors with high affinity for DTX were identified on brain synaptosomal membranes and found to contain a 65 000 Mr polypeptide. Their location in rat brain regions was established and contrasted with that of the binding sites for beta-bungarotoxin. These findings indicate the usefulness of DTX as a probe for a protein associated with one variety of K+ channel while the larger subunit of BoNT was found to interact with a membraneous component that resides at cholinergic nerve terminals and, hence, is likely to have a unique role.

PubMedSearch : Dolly_1984_J.Physiol.(Paris)_79_280
PubMedID: 6152294

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Citations formats

Dolly JO, Halliwell JV, Black JD, Williams RS, Pelchen-Matthews A, Breeze AL, Mehraban F, Othman IB, Black AR (1984)
Botulinum neurotoxin and dendrotoxin as probes for studies on transmitter release
Journal de Physiologie (Paris) 79 :280

Dolly JO, Halliwell JV, Black JD, Williams RS, Pelchen-Matthews A, Breeze AL, Mehraban F, Othman IB, Black AR (1984)
Journal de Physiologie (Paris) 79 :280