Title : High rates of excitatory miniature currents in crayfish claw opener muscle evoked by high concentrations of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in normal and Ca2+-deficient superfusions - Finger_1984_Neurosci.Lett_47_251 |
Author(s) : Finger W |
Ref : Neuroscience Letters , 47 :251 , 1984 |
Abstract :
High concentrations (0.5 mol/l) of the neutral amino acid GABA were used to evoke release of transmitter quanta from excitatory terminals at voltage clamped crayfish muscle fibres in normal and Ca2+-deficient superfusions. An experiment in which the release of transmitter quanta proceeded at high rates in both normal and Ca2+-deficient superfusion was analyzed in detail indicating a Ca2+-independent mechanism of release. In the normal superfusion, on application of GABA, the release rates n increased within a few seconds up to about 6000 quanta/s and thereafter declined exponentially with a time constant tau q = 18.5 s, most likely due to depletion of a readily releasable store of transmitter in the excitatory nerve terminals comprising at least 110,000 quanta per muscle fibre. Assuming that about 1900 excitatory synapses exist per muscle fibre [9], it results that about 58 quanta can be associated with each synapse in agreement with morphological data [15] which show that between 47-117 vesicles exist in a single glutamatergic synapse of crayfish. |
PubMedSearch : Finger_1984_Neurosci.Lett_47_251 |
PubMedID: 6089041 |
Finger W (1984)
High rates of excitatory miniature currents in crayfish claw opener muscle evoked by high concentrations of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in normal and Ca2+-deficient superfusions
Neuroscience Letters
47 :251
Finger W (1984)
Neuroscience Letters
47 :251