| Title : Ultra-fast versus sustained cholinergic transmission: a variety of different mechanisms - Dunant_2010_J.Mol.Neurosci_40_27 |
| Author(s) : Dunant Y , Bancila V , Cordeiro M |
| Ref : Journal of Molecular Neuroscience , 40 :27 , 2010 |
|
Abstract :
Although synaptic transmission was assumed to use the same mechanisms in the case of different synapses of the central and peripheral nervous system, recent research revealed a great variety of different processes. Time might be a crucial factor to be considered in this diversity. It is recalled that the speed of a chemical reaction is inversely related to affinity. "Time is gained at the expense of sensitivity" as noticed by Bernard Katz (1989). Therefore, synaptic transmission will occur at a high speed only if it is supported by low affinity reactions. In the present work, we compare two examples of ultra-rapid transmission (the Torpedo nerve electroplaque synapse and the rat hippocampus mossy fiber/CA3 synapses), with a cholinergic process operating with high affinity but at a low speed: the release of glutamate elicited by nicotine from mossy fibers of the rat hippocampus. |
| PubMedSearch : Dunant_2010_J.Mol.Neurosci_40_27 |
| PubMedID: 19777383 |
Dunant Y, Bancila V, Cordeiro M (2010)
Ultra-fast versus sustained cholinergic transmission: a variety of different mechanisms
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience
40 :27
Dunant Y, Bancila V, Cordeiro M (2010)
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience
40 :27