Abstract
When the presynaptic membrane protein syntaxin is coexpressed inXenopus oocytes with N- or P/Q-type Ca2+ channels, it promotes their inactivation (Bezprozvanny et al., 1995; Wiser et al., 1996, 1999; Degtiar et al., 2000) (I. B. Bezprozvanny, P. Zhong, R. H. Scheller, and R. W. Tsien, unpublished observations). These findings led to the hypothesis that syntaxin influences Ca2+channel function in presynaptic endings, in a reversal of the conventional flow of information from Ca2+ channels to the release machinery. We examined this effect in isolated mammalian nerve terminals (synaptosomes). Botulinum neurotoxin type C1 (BoNtC1), which cleaves syntaxin, was applied to rat neocortical synaptosomes at concentrations that completely blocked neurotransmitter release. This treatment altered the pattern of Ca2+ entry monitored with fura-2. Whereas the initial Ca2+ rise induced by depolarization with K+-rich solution was unchanged, late Ca2+ entry was strongly augmented by syntaxin cleavage. Similar results were obtained when Ca2+ influx arose from repetitive firing induced by the K+-channel blocker 4-aminopyridine. Cleavage of vesicle-associated membrane protein with BoNtD or SNAP-25 with BoNtE failed to produce a significant change in Ca2+ entry. The BoNtC1-induced alteration in Ca2+ signaling was specific to voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, not Ca2+ extrusion or buffering, and it involved N-, P/Q- and R-type channels, the high voltage-activated channels most intimately associated with presynaptic release machinery. The modulatory effect of syntaxin was not immediately manifest when synaptosomes had been K+-predepolarized in the absence of external Ca2+, but developed with a delay after admission of Ca2+, suggesting that vesicular turnover may be necessary to make syntaxin available for its stabilizing effect on Ca2+ channel inactivation.
- synaptosome
- syntaxin
- calcium channel
- SNARE
- synapse
- synaptic vesicle
- modulation
- clostridium botulinum
- toxin
- neurotoxin
- conotoxin
- agatoxin
- rat
Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels convert the action potential depolarization into a Ca2+ signal that in turn triggers vesicular neurotransmitter release. The triggering event is remarkably rapid and effective; its efficient achievement requires that calcium channels and the fusion machinery be held together in close proximity (Llinás et al., 1981). Indeed, Ca2+channels have the capability of directly binding to soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (NSF) attachment protein (SNAP) receptor (SNARE) proteins, putative components of the vesicular fusion complex (Sheng et al., 1994; Rettig et al., 1996; Charvin et al., 1997). These include a vesicular (v) SNARE, vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP), also known as synaptobrevin, another vesicular protein—synaptotagmin—as well as syntaxin and SNAP-25, two target membrane (t) SNAREs. The interactions with the v- and t-SNARES are most clear for the α1 subunits of N- and P/Q-type channels, the types of voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCCs) that are most important for fast neurotransmitter release at nerve terminals in the mammalian CNS. When isolated from rat forebrain, a majority of N- and P/Q-type channels appear associated with SNARE proteins (el Far et al., 1995; Martin-Moutot et al., 1996; Pupier et al., 1997; Vance et al., 1999). The channel-SNARE protein interaction may be susceptible to regulation (Sheng et al., 1996, 1997; Kim and Catterall, 1997; Yokoyama et al., 1997).
The existence of physical interactions between Ca2+ channels and SNARE proteins raises an intriguing possibility: in addition to the mechanism whereby Ca2+ influx triggers secretion, originally proposed by Katz and Miledi (1965) and Douglas (1968), can the secretory machinery also exert an influence on Ca2+ influx? The idea of such a counterflow of information was suggested independently for two different proteins: cysteine string proteins, which were proposed to signal the presence of a docked vesicle to the Ca2+ channel (Mastrogiacomo et al., 1994), and syntaxin, whose overexpression was found to reduce Ca2+ influx in Aplysia neurons (Smirnova et al., 1995). Subsequently, heterologous coexpression of syntaxin, SNAP-25, or synaptotagmin with either N- or P/Q- type (and in some cases, L- type) VSCCs in Xenopus oocytes was shown to affect channel activity (Bezprozvanny et al., 1995; Wiser et al., 1996,1999; Degtiar et al., 2000). Effects of coexpression of SNAP-25 and a specific isoform of α1A have also been seen in HEK 293 cells (Zhong et al., 1999). Syntaxin was also found to be required for G-protein modulation of Ca2+ channels in calyciform presynaptic terminals in chick ciliary ganglia (Stanley and Mirotznik, 1997).
These intriguing observations prompted us to ask whether such interactions occur in functional mammalian nerve terminals. To investigate the regulation of Ca2+ influx by specific SNARE proteins, we have measured fluorimetrically Ca2+ changes and glutamate release in synaptosomes and tested effects of various clostridial neurotoxins, proteases which selectively cleave SNARE proteins (Montecucco and Schiavo, 1995). The results provided evidence that syntaxin exerts a significant influence on Ca2+ influx through N-, P/Q- and R-type channels in mammalian nerve terminals.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Synaptosome preparation. Synaptosomes were prepared essentially as described (McMahon et al., 1992). Brains from two or three 6- to 8-week-old Sprague Dawley rats were homogenized in ∼20 ml of ice-cold 0.32 m sucrose in a Potter–Elvehjem (Teflon glass) tissue homogenizer driven at 400–500 rpm. This suspension was diluted to a final volume of ∼20 ml per brain with more ice-cold sucrose and centrifuged at 3000 × g for 3 min at 4°C. Sufficient dilution of synaptosomes was important to prevent clumping. The supernatant was centrifuged at 14,600 ×g for 12 min at 4°C. The upper layers of the pellets formed were resuspended in ∼2 ml of ice-cold sucrose per brain used. Before use synaptosomes were washed by 1:2 dilution with basal buffer (BB) (in mm: NaCl 140, KCl 5, MgCl2 1, NaHCO3 5, HEPES pH 7.4 20, glucose 10, 0.2 μm filtered) and resuspended in the medium of choice. A sample of each synaptosome preparation was washed and solubilized in 0.15% SDS for the determination of protein concentration using the BCA kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL) with BSA as a standard.
Features common to all experiments. All dye and clostridial toxin treatment was done in bulk for the day's experiments as described below. Dye loading preceded toxin treatment. After any dye loading and/or clostridial toxin treatment, synaptosomes were washed by pelleting and resuspension in the appropriate buffer. After the final treatment, synaptosomes were washed and resuspended at 2 mg/ml in BB. This suspension was aliquoted into single run amounts (2 mg for glutamate release and 1 mg for Ca2+measurements) and stored on ice. Such aliquots were spun down and resuspended in 2 ml of prewarmed experimental buffer and allowed to equilibrate to 36–37°C for 4 min in the continuously stirred, heated cuvette holder of the spectrofluorimeter immediately before each experiment. In all experiments, the cuvette contained 0.63 mm EGTA, along with any Ca2+channel blockers or other drugs during the 4 min warming period. To produce the free Ca2+ levels indicated in the text, CaCl2 was added in amounts calculated by the Maxchelator software, version 6.50, using the Bers constants (Chris Patton, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA). Fluorescence measurements were made in a Perkin-Elmer (Norwalk, CT) LS50B spectrofluorimeter using the Perkin-Elmer FLDM software. Data were exported in ASCII format.
Calcium indicator loading. Synaptosomes to be used for Ca2+ measurements for a given day were suspended at 2 mg/ml in loading buffer (LB; BB with 1.3 mmCa2+ and 50 mg/ml BSA; 0.2 μm filtered). The synaptosomes were loaded with fura-2 AM dissolved in DMSO (or Magfura-2 AM in some experiments not shown) at a final concentration of 10 μm (final [DMSO] = 0.5%) for 45 min at 37°C.
Clostridial toxin treatment. Synaptosomes to be treated with clostridial toxins were suspended at 2 mg/ml in LB. Toxins were normally used at the following concentrations: botulinum neurotoxin type C1 (BoNtC1) 66 nm, BoNtD 110 nm, BoNtE 110 nm, and BoNtC3 1.67 μg/ml. All lots of BoNtC1, BoNtD, and BoNtE used were tested and were found to completely block Ca2+-dependent glutamate release at these concentrations. Toxin treatment was at 37°C for 45 min. In some experiments indicated in the text, BoNtD and BoNtE were used at 220 nm, and treatment was for 120 min. Control synaptosomes in toxin experiments received mock treatments in parallel that differed only in that toxin was not added. In heat-treated toxin controls, toxin was diluted to twice its final concentration in BB and held at 95°C for 45 min. This was cooled and combined with synaptosomes at 4 mg/ml in LB (yielding the identical toxin and synaptosome concentrations used in the other experiments) and incubated at 37°C for 45 min.
Calcium flux measurement and corrections. In control experiments we found that our dye-loaded synaptosomes contained dye in one or more compartments that were inaccessible even after treatment with digitonin (18 mg/ml) or ionomycin (100 μm), compared to treatment with SDS (0.1%), as well as one or more compartments that allowed voltage-independent Ca2+ fluxes (Fig. 2A; see below). This compartmentalization was very similar between fura-2 and magfura-2 and was not dependent on the dye concentration during loading (data not shown). Our experiments indicated that the inaccessible dye was not in synaptosomal cytosol (Fig. 2A, inset; see below). Some of this dye was Ca2+-bound, and some was Ca2+-free because the direction of the fluorescence change on SDS treatment after previous digitonin or ionomycin treatment was [Ca2+]o-dependent. The similar results with the indicators of different Ca2+ affinities suggested that the dye resided in at least two compartments and that each compartment had either very high or very low [Ca2+] relative to the dissociation constants of the indicators. Under these conditions, application of the equation used by Grynkiewicz et al. (1985) to calculate [Ca2+] was inappropriate, because one of its assumptions is that all dye molecules are experiencing the same [Ca2+]. Additionally, nerve terminals have very high concentrations of endogenous Ca2+ buffers (Fontana and Blaustein, 1993) that would skew the relationship between our parameter of interest, Ca2+ influx, and free [Ca2+]. For these two reasons, we chose to use relatively heavy fura-2 loading and to use the change in fluorescence normalized by the baseline fluorescence at the beginning of the experiment as a measure of accumulated Ca2+ influx (Neher and Augustine, 1992;Neher, 1995). Because this method only required measuring at one wavelength, it also had the benefit of allowing faster sampling rates. The principal concerns when not using ratiometric methods are dye photobleaching and changes in path length. We determined in control experiments that bleaching was not significant on the time scale of our experiments (data not shown). Changes in path length are not of concern in a stirred cuvette.
We measured Ca2+ influx by monitoring the fluorescence at 505 nm from excitation at 382 nm, sampled once per 0.6 sec. Background fluorescence from an equivalent sample of synaptosomes not loaded with dye was recorded at the beginning of the experiments of each day and subtracted from all subsequent readings. When drugs that affected fluorescence readings, such as nimodipine, were used, background readings taken with the drug present were subtracted from the experimental results. Note that experiments with and without such compounds may not be compared quantitatively. Background fluorescence was typically <10% of the total signal. After background subtraction, each trace was normalized to the average fluorescence during its 15 sec baseline. Fluorescence decreases at 382 nm, signifying increases in [Ca2+], are plotted upwards in the figures.
Characterization and correction of the depolarization-independent calcium signal. We presumed that the depolarization-independent signal that resulted from the addition of Ca2+ alone seen in Figure2A was Ca2+equilibrating into some compartment that contained fura-2 but had its Ca2+ depleted during the 4 min incubation in EGTA. If this compartment was separate from the synaptosomal cytosolic compartment, we wanted to subtract the change of fluorescence attributable to Ca2+ entering this compartment to reveal the true size of any change in the signal that resulted from influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels into synaptosomes. We therefore investigated the nature of this compartment.
In principle, a depolarization-independent signal might result from the binding of added Ca2+ to fura-2 that had leaked out of the synaptosomes or other structures into the incubation medium. This was not the case because (1) the signal was only about two-thirds saturated by the addition of 10 μmCa2+ (which is ∼50 times theKd of fura-2 for Ca2+) and (2) none of the signal returned quickly to baseline after the addition of sufficient EGTA to lower the free [Ca2+] to <10 nm (unlike free fura-2, which released its bound Ca2+ within the few seconds mixing time of our equipment; data not shown). Therefore this fura-2 was trapped in some compartment that exchanges Ca2+ with the external medium with some resistance.
Because the entry of Ca2+ into the compartment containing this fura-2 was not depolarization-dependent, we presumed that it does not represent flux through VSCCs into synaptosomes. To confirm this, we performed several control experiments with known blockers of VSCCs. The depolarization-independent Ca2+ signal was not significantly changed (p > 0.38) when external Ca2+ was added in the combined presence of blockers of L-type (10 μm nimodipine), N-type [1 μm ω-conotoxin GVIA (GVIA)], and P/Q-type [1 μm ω-agatoxin or 1 μm ω-conotoxin MVIIC (MVIIC)] Ca2+ channels (data not shown). This ruled out the possibility of a flux through Ca2+channels that were somehow open even in resting synaptosomes.
We next considered the possibility that the depolarization-independent Ca2+ signal might arise from Na+/Ca2+antiport. This was not the case because exposure to 50 μmBepridil, an inhibitor of the Na+/Ca2+antiporter (Kleyman and Cragoe, 1988), did not affect the Ca2+ signal that resulted from the Ca2+ addition (data not shown). We also tested the idea that the Ca2+ signal might arise from flux into or out of mitochondria or other Ca2+ stores: when the protocol was performed after preincubation (4 min) and in the continued presence of 1 μm thapsigargin (an inhibitor of a Ca2+ store Ca2+-ATPase) or 3 μmcarbonyl cyanide p-(triflouromethoxy)phenyl-hydrazone (FCCP) (a protonophore that causes discharge of mitochondrial Ca2+ stores), the signal was unchanged compared to that in the absence of drug (data not shown). (The experiments using FCCP were performed by exciting fluorescence at 340 nm instead of 382 nm because FCCP has a strong absorbance peak at the latter wavelength.) Finally, if the depolarization-independent signal resulted from Ca2+ binding to fura-2 in the synaptosomal cytosol, given the magnitude of the signal we would expect that such Ca2+ should have caused some neurotransmitter release. When we measured glutamate release caused by Ca2+ addition without depolarization, no increase above the small background release rate was seen (Fig. 2A, inset).
Because the depolarization-independent signal resulted from Ca2+ binding to fura-2 in a pool that was separate from the one in which we were interested, we have subtracted the depolarization-independent signal from all traces shown except those in Figure 2. To not introduce noise from the subtraction, we subtracted smooth curves that were fit to the average depolarization-independent signals from the experiments of each day. The curves had no theoretical significance and consisted of a flat baseline that changed to the sum of two exponentials plus a sloping line at the time of Ca2+ addition. Curves were fit by minimizing least square differences with Microsoft Excel, version 7.0a. Such a subtraction in the fluorescence domain is valid when comparing fluorescence changes if and only if the subtracted fluorescence signal arises outside the dye pool of interest. Depolarization-independent signals were collected for each experimental condition and were not found to be significantly different for any experimental condition tested. Approximately equal numbers of depolarization-independent and depolarization-dependent signals were measured each day in each condition.
Importance of preincubation conditions for detection of Ca2+ influx modulation. In our initial efforts, we failed to detect an effect of BoNtC1 on Ca2+ influx in synaptosomes, despite complete inhibition of Ca2+-dependent release (Bergsman and Tsien, 1996). We discovered that an effect of BoNtC1 was revealed if the resting [Ca2+] in the synaptosomes were lowered with a preincubation in a solution with a free Ca2+ concentration <10 nm. We confirmed that preincubation in Ca2+-containing medium eliminated the syntaxin effect by varying the interval between Ca2+ and KCl addition between 3.5 sec (the shortest interval we were able to implement) and 25 sec. When Ca2+ was applied for 25 sec before the stimulus, BoNtC1-treated synaptosomes displayed a Ca2+ rise that was not significantly different than that in control synaptosomes (p> 0.25).
Glutamate release measurement and corrections. Glutamate release was monitored essentially as described (Nicholls et al., 1987). Released glutamate was detected as an increase in the fluorescence at 460 nm, with excitation at 340 nm, caused by the production of NADPH from NADP+, coupled to the oxidation of the released glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate by glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). Two milligrams of synaptosomes were suspended in 2 ml of BB made up to 1 mm NADP+. One hundred units of GDH were added immediately before the start of data collection. A reading of the background fluorescence of the synaptosomes and any NADP+/NADPH was taken at the start of each run and subtracted from subsequent measurements.
The data from glutamate release experiments were corrected for the lag of the enzyme in NADPH production by a program written for this purpose. The kinetics of the response of the system to a pulse of glutamate added at the end of each run were used to backcalculate the amount of unconverted glutamate for a given rate of NADPH production. This value was added to the raw NADPH data, and the result was converted from fluorescence to amount of glutamate based on the amplitude of the response to the glutamate standard. Although the data were collected and displayed every 0.6 sec, the correction algorithm filters the data to ∼8 sec resolution.
Statistics. Statistical differences were assayed on the average of the last 10 sec of each trace using a two-tailedt test assuming unequal variances. Calculations were performed with Microsoft Excel, version 7.0a using the data analysis add-in.
Materials. Clostridial toxins were from Wako USA (Richmond, VA). The VSCC blockers GVIA, AgaIVA, and MVIIC were from Peptide Institute (Osaka, Japan). AgaIVB was a generous gift from Michael Adams (University of California, Riverside, CA).l-AP-4 was from Tocris (Ballwin, MO). Nimodipine, (+)α-methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine (MCPG), and thapsigargin were from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA). Glutamate dehydrogenase, staurosporine, ionomycin, and NADP+ were from Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA). Fura-2 AM and Magfura-2 AM were from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). Cuvettes were UV-grade acrylic and were from Denville Scientific (Metuchen, NJ). Western analysis was done according to standard protocols and detected with the ECL kit (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK). Other reagents were from Fluka (Buchs, Switzerland), Aldrich (Milwaukee, WI), or Sigma (St. Louis, MO) and were of at least American Chemical Society grade where applicable.
RESULTS
Cleaving syntaxin with botulinum toxin C1 increases calcium influx
To determine whether syntaxin influences Ca2+ channels in nerve terminals, we looked for an effect of BoNtC1, which cleaves syntaxin, on Ca2+ entry in rat cortical synaptosomes (Fig. 1A). Ca2+ entry was evoked by successive application of 1 mm CaCl2and 60 mm KCl, 3.5 sec apart to fura-2-loaded synaptosomes. The synaptosomes were preincubated in nominally 0 Ca2+ external solution (see Materials and Methods), an important experimental feature for the results that follow. Because N- and P/Q-type channels are the main putative targets of syntaxin action (Bezprozvanny et al., 1995), experiments were performed in the presence of 10 μm nimodipine to block L-type channels unless otherwise specified. Figure1A compares depolarization-dependent fluorescence signals recorded from synaptosomes that had been pretreated with BoNtC1 with signals taken from control synaptosomes, not treated with toxin. Traces from three separate runs are shown in each case, and the signals have been corrected for the depolarization-independent signal caused by addition of Ca2+ without K+ (Fig.2A). As a result of depolarization-induced opening of Ca2+channels, the control traces rose rapidly to a peak before progressively decaying over the next 60 sec. The Ca2+ signals from three parallel runs with BoNtC1-treated synaptosomes showed an early rise nearly identical to the control traces, but decayed much more slowly and to a lesser extent. Thus, the impact of the toxin pretreatment grew progressively larger over the course of the depolarization. This effect was not observed when synaptosomes were pretreated with heat-inactivated BoNtC1 (Fig. 1B): in this case, no significant alteration of the depolarization-induced Ca2+ transients was observed (p > 0.4). In separate experiments, we verified that pretreatment with the heat-inactivated toxin failed to cleave syntaxin or to block Ca2+-dependent glutamate release, effects clearly evident with BoNtC1 (data not shown).
The effect of BoNtC1 is specific to depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry
We performed additional control experiments to find out whether BoNtC1 acted on pathways for Ca2+equilibration, distinct from voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. Figure 2Aillustrates the depolarization-independent Ca2+ rise that was produced by exposing the synaptosomal preparation to 1 mmCaCl2 without subsequent addition of 60 mm KCl. Parallel experiments showed that this fluorescence signal arose from Ca2+ uptake into a compartment distinct from functional synaptosomes (see Materials and Methods). The uptake process was unresponsive to inhibitors of known Ca2+ transport pathways and was not associated with any detectable glutamate release (Fig. 2A, inset). As shown in Figure 2A, the depolarization-independent Ca2+ rise was not significantly affected by BoNtC1 (p > 0.4). Corrections have been made for the depolarization-independent Ca2+ rise in all other figures (see Materials and Methods for details).
Another series of experiments tested for an effect of syntaxin cleavage on the performance of Ca2+ buffering and extrusion mechanisms. These are undoubtedly recruited once intrasynaptosomal Ca2+ has been elevated by voltage-gated Ca2+ entry. Figure2B shows the protocol we used to focus on Ca2+ restorative processes. At different intervals after the introduction of KCl to depolarize the synaptosomes (3.5 or 25 sec), sufficient EGTA was added to the cuvette to return external free [Ca2+] to a level below 10 nm. In the virtual absence of external Ca2+, Ca2+entry through voltage-dependent channels must cease, leaving only processes of Ca2+ buffering and extrusion. As expected, the averaged fluorescence signal after EGTA addition (traces labeled “EGTA”) declined much more rapidly than the signal that included the contribution of continuing Ca2+ channel influx (“no EGTA”). This indicated that Ca2+ influx into the synaptosomes continued over the entire course of the prolonged depolarization, as previously reported (McMahon and Nicholls, 1991).
As shown in Figure 2C, pretreating the synaptosomes with BoNtC1 had no effect on the Ca2+ signal recorded after EGTA addition. Thus, cleavage of syntaxin did not affect the Ca2+ buffering and extrusion that followed the initial Ca2+ rise. An incremental effect of BoNtC1 pretreatment was only seen when depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry was allowed to continue.
The BoNtC1-induced increase in Ca2+ influx does not result from block of glutamate release
We considered the idea that BoNtC1 treatment might increase Ca2+ influx by blocking neurotransmitter release, thereby relieving Ca2+ channels from feedback inhibition via presynaptic receptors. This possibility gains plausibility with knowledge that glutamatergic nerve terminals greatly outnumber presynaptic terminals containing other neurotransmitters, (Verhage et al., 1991, 1995; McMahon et al., 1992) and activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) is known to downregulate non-L-type Ca2+ channels. Accordingly, we tested whether the BoNtC1 effect persisted when Ca2+ influx was evoked in the presence of a group III mGluR agonist (30 μml-AP-4) or a general mGluR antagonist (0.75 or 1.5 mm +MCPG). Neither agent caused a significant change in the magnitude or time course of the BoNtC1 effect (data not shown). If anything, +MCPG slightly decreased Ca2+ influx, in the opposite direction from what would be expected from feedback via mGluR receptors. Additional evidence against secondary effects of blocking neurotransmitter release was derived from experiments with other clostridial neurotoxins (see below).
Modification of voltage-gated Ca2+ influx is specific to BoNtC1
It was of interest to compare the effect of BoNtC1 with that of other clostridial neurotoxins. Figure3A shows pooled results for the effect of BoNtC1, obtained from five independent synaptosome preparations (13 BoNtC1 trials and 10 control trials). The averaged data show once again that the toxin pretreatment did not alter the magnitude of the Ca2+ increase over the first few seconds but produced a highly significant increase in late Ca2+ influx (p < 0.001).
A potential complication in experiments with BoNtC1 is the possibility of contamination of the toxin preparation with a related molecule, BoNtC3, an ADP ribosyltransferase, that might be isolated from the same organism in trace amounts. This cannot be completely excluded even though according to the manufacturer, Wako Chemicals, the commercially available preparation of BoNtC1 toxin appeared as a single band on disk-PAGE. Accordingly, we tested BoNtC3 at a dose that would allow for up to 5% contamination of the BoNtC1 preparation. Even at this relatively high concentration, BoNtC3 produced no significant effect on the intracellular Ca2+ transient (Fig.3B) (p > 0.3) and no detectable effect on Ca2+-dependent glutamate release (Fig. 3F).
Cleavage of VAMP or SNAP-25 does not affect calcium influx
Syntaxin is but one of several SNARE proteins known to be involved in vesicle docking and fusion in presynaptic terminals. Other SNARE proteins include SNAP-25 and VAMP. Because SNAP-25 and VAMP have been found to engage in direct binding interactions with voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (el Far et al., 1995; Rettig et al., 1996; Sheng et al., 1996; Kim and Catterall, 1997), it was of considerable interest to test for possible modulatory effects on Ca2+ channel activity. Accordingly, we asked whether Ca2+ influx might be modified by cleaving VAMP with botulinum toxin D or SNAP-25 with botulinum toxin E (Niemann et al., 1994). (Unfortunately, no neurotoxin is available to cleave synaptotagmin.) Both of these toxins cleaved their expected targets at terminals capable of Ca2+-dependent glutamate release, as shown by their complete block of such release (Fig. 3G,H). However, the depolarization-induced Ca2+transient was not affected by pretreatment of the synaptosomes with BoNtD (Fig. 3C; p > 0.5) or by BoNtE pretreatment (Fig. 3D; p > 0.7). Western analysis of toxin-treated synaptosomes showed only partial cleavage of syntaxin, SNAP-25, and VAMP (data not shown), in accord with previous reports (Schiavo et al., 1992, 1995; Blasi et al., 1993a,b; Williamson et al., 1996; Capogna et al., 1997; Raciborska et al., 1998). Various possibilities that might account for the partial cleavage are as follows. The SNARE proteins might be present in intact synaptosomes, but sequestered in a noncycling pool that is uncleavable by BoNts. Alternatively, they may be trapped as heterotrimeric complexes resistant to BoNt cleavage if they were in metabolically inactive synaptosomes in which NSF would be inoperative. Finally, SNARE proteins may be present in lysed synaptosomes and unsealed membrane fragments that are unable to produce or retain the toxin light chain. The latter possibilities would not affect our conclusions because they involve structures that would not participate in either transmitter release or Ca2+influx. Because we could not be certain about the basis for the incomplete cleavage, we proceeded to examine the effects of more aggressive toxin treatment, just to be on the safe side. Doses of BoNtD or BoNtE threefold higher than those used to produce an effect with BoNtC1, applied for periods lasting over twice as long, still failed to produce an effect on Ca2+ influx (data not shown). The lack of effect of BoNtE is particularly notable, because it excludes the possibility that BoNtC1 might have acted merely through cleavage of SNAP-25 rather than syntaxin (Foran et al., 1996;Williamson et al., 1996; Capogna et al., 1997). The lack of effect of either BoNtD or BoNtE rules out the idea that the action of BoNtC1 is secondary to blockade of exocytosis (see above); if this were the case, each of the clostridial toxins that block neurotransmitter release would be expected to have similar effects, contrary to what was observed.
Identification of Ca2+ channel types susceptible to modulation by syntaxin
The results presented so far (Figs. 1-3) apply to all non-L-type channels pooled together. To discriminate further among the individual channel types, additional pharmacological dissection of Ca2+ influx was performed using channel-specific toxins against a constant background of L-type blockade (Fig. 4B–D). Figure 4B shows Ca2+entry signals evoked in the presence of AgaIVB (1 μm), a potent blocker of P/Q-type channels that largely spares N-type channels (Adams et al., 1993; Teramoto et al., 1993) (M. Cataldi, personal communication). Under these conditions, the ability of BoNtC1 to modify Ca2+ influx remained significant (p < 0.05) and was retained to at least the same degree (61% increase) as that found when the P/Q-type channels were full contributors to the Ca2+ signal (56% increase; Fig. 4A) (changes measured over the last 10 sec of the 60 sec exposure to high K+). Likewise, the BoNtC1 effect persisted (p < 0.001) when N-type channels were blocked with 0.5 μm GVIA (Fig. 4C), although it was smaller than when N-type channels were not blocked (38 vs 56%). Reports of significant R-type current (Randall and Tsien, 1995) in some rat central nerve terminals (Meder et al., 1997; Newcomb et al., 1998; Wu et al., 1998) prompted us to test for effects of cleaving syntaxin on this type of Ca2+ influx. Figure 4D shows Ca2+signals obtained with both N- and P/Q-type channels blocked under the combined influence of 0.5 μm GVIA + 1 μm ω-conotoxin MVIIC (once again under conditions of L-type channel blockade). The Ca2+ signal supported by the remaining R-type channels reached a peak only approximately one-third as large as that produced by all non-L type channels together. Nevertheless, the BoNtC1 effect on this influx was rather large (112% increase;p < 0.01). Taken together, these results suggest that R-type channels, like other non-L-type channels, are capable of responding to syntaxin cleavage.
In addition to testing the effect of BoNtC1 on non L-type channels, we specifically looked for an effect of the toxin under conditions in which L-type channels made a prominent contribution to the synaptosomal Ca2+ entry. Synaptosomes were exposed to GVIA (0.5 μm) and MVIIC (1 μm), which should block N-type and N-, P-, and Q-type channels respectively, sparing L- and R-type channels (Fig. 4D). The remaining Ca2+ influx stimulated by KCl depolarization was minimally affected by BoNtC1, resulting in a 30% increase that was not significantly different (p> 0.1), attributable in part to larger variability in these experiments. It is possible that any impact of BoNtC1 under these conditions arose from the responsiveness of a minority fraction of unblocked R-type channels, although we cannot exclude an additional small effect of syntaxin on L-type channels themselves. The overall conclusion is that syntaxin cleavage affects N-type and R-type channels most prominently, exerts a milder effect on P/Q-type channels, and gives little or no effect on L-type channels.
BoNtC1 reveals syntaxin effect on Ca2+ influx stimulated by 4-aminopyridine
A critical series of experiments tested whether the influence of syntaxin extended to Ca2+ influx stimulated by methods other than direct K+-depolarization. We used the K+ channel inhibitor 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), which blocks certain voltage-gated K+ channels and thereby causes spontaneous, TTX-sensitive repetitive firing in synaptosomes (Tibbs et al., 1989, 1996). Figure 5 shows the Ca2+ signal evoked by stimulating synaptosomes with 2 mm 4-AP and the effect of BoNtC1. 4-AP produced a sustained rise in synaptosomal free Ca2+ concentration somewhat smaller than that evoked by high K+ (Tibbs et al., 1989). Pretreatment with BoNtC1 caused a significant increase in the steady level of Ca2+(p < 0.002), very much like that found with high K+ stimulation. On a percentage basis, the BoNtC1-mediated increase was at least as large with 4-AP (63%) as it was with K+ stimulation (56%). If anything, the incremental difference in the Ca2+ signal in treated and untreated synaptosomes developed more rapidly with 4-AP stimulation, reaching its maximum value after ∼15 sec, whereas this difference continued to develop for at least 30 sec with K+stimulation. The magnitude of the difference and the speed of its development may be accounted for by the kinetic properties of the syntaxin inhibition as studied with cloned N-type Ca2+ channels (α1B) in Xenopus oocytes (Degtiar et al., 2000). In comparison to maintained depolarizations, repeated brief depolarizations (akin to the activity thought to be induced by 4-AP) are not only more efficient in inducing inactivation of Ca2+ channels (Patil et al., 1998) but also more effective in allowing syntaxin to exert its inactivation-promoting effect (see Discussion). An additional possibility is that 4-AP induced Ca2+entry through a somewhat different mixture of Ca2+ channel types than that stimulated by K+ elevation.
Time course of the action of syntaxin
The absence of an immediate effect is noteworthy in light of our previous findings in Xenopus oocytes (Bezprozvanny et al., 1995; Degtiar et al., 2000). These results showed that free syntaxin decreased the availability of N- and P/Q-type Ca2+ channels over a wide range of membrane potentials, probably spanning the resting potential of the synaptosomes. Thus, if syntaxin were free to interact with Ca2+ channels, we would have expected a decrease in Ca2+ influx immediately after K+-depolarization, very like that seen in oocyte recordings of Ca2+ channel current. In contrast, there was a striking absence of any immediate effect with either high K+ or 4-AP stimulation. We considered three possible explanations of the delayed effect. In one scenario, cleavage of syntaxin by previously internalized BoNtC1 light chain would await activation of the release machinery. This interpretation seems highly unlikely in light of our finding that glutamate release is completely blocked by the standard toxin pretreatment, with no hint of a brief burst of release followed by no release, as would be expected for delayed cleavage by toxin. In a second scenario, synaptosomal Ca2+channels would undergo voltage-dependent inactivation at relatively depolarized potentials, so that syntaxin stabilization of inactivation would only be asserted after external K+had been elevated. Finally, it seemed possible that the syntaxin in synaptic terminals would not be free at first to modulate the Ca2+ channels, but would only become capable of channel modulation as a consequence of the progressive vesicular turnover that follows depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry (Bezprozvanny, Zhong, Scheller, and Tsien, unpublished observations). To distinguish between these latter two possibilities, we applied a strong predepolarization in the absence of Ca2+, to increase the degree of channel inactivation before assaying Ca2+entry. Synaptosomes were exposed to 60 mmK+, low Ca2+solution for either 3.5 (Fig.6A) or 60 sec (Fig.6B) before admission of Ca2+. This procedure would maximize the chances of detecting an immediate effect of syntaxin if the second scenario were applicable. As expected, predepolarization significantly attenuated the initial rise in Ca2+. There was a 14% drop in peak Ca2+ level with the 60 sec predepolarization relative to that evoked after the 3.5 sec predepolarization (and probably an even greater decrease relative to Ca2+ transients evoked without any predepolarization; Fig. 3A). However, after either 3.5 or 60 sec predepolarizations, there was still no significant difference between the initial Ca2+ signals with and without BoNtC1 pretreatment. The modulatory effect of syntaxin developed with a delay, just as in the experiments in which no predepolarization was imposed. This experiment excluded the second scenario, but left open the possibility that the modulatory action of syntaxin was not asserted until some event downstream of Ca2+ entry had taken place, vesicular turnover being a likely possibility.
DISCUSSION
Our experiments have provided the first evidence that a SNARE protein can influence Ca2+ influx in vertebrate nerve terminals. Treatment of synaptosomes with BoNtC1 to cleave syntaxin caused an increase in Ca2+entry caused by a lessened shutting off of Ca2+ channels, not an enhancement of Ca2+ extrusion. The increase in Ca2+ influx required syntaxin cleavage: neither BoNtD cleavage of VAMP nor BoNtE cleavage of SNAP-25 had any detectable effect, although all the toxins were confirmed as active by monitoring the cleavage of SNARE protein targets and the blockade of glutamate release. Based on pharmacological dissection of Ca2+ currents, this effect appeared to be greatest on the activity of N- and R-type channels, smaller on P/Q-type channels, and was not detectable in the case of L-type channels.
Initial condition important for detection of syntaxin modulation
The effect of BoNtC1 was seen if the synaptosomes were preincubated in nominally zero Ca2+solution, presumably because this preserved a low initial level of [Ca2+]i, but not after preincubation with 2 mm[Ca2+]o (see Materials and Methods). We considered the possibility that the initial [Ca2+]i might influence the activity of protein kinases that can in principle interfere with the interaction between syntaxin and the α1 subunit of the Ca2+ channel (Yokoyama et al., 1997). However, when we tested effects of 10 μm KN62, an inhibitor of CaMKII, or 2 μm staurosporine, a relatively broad spectrum kinase inhibitor that blocks the action of PKC, we were unable to rescue the BoNtC1 effect in the face of preincubation in Ca2+-containing external solution. Thus, it remains unclear how the basal Ca2+level regulates the effects of syntaxin on Ca2+ channels. The explanation may be important in understanding the physiological significance of the syntaxin modulation.
Comparison with previous results in other systems
The influence of syntaxin on Ca2+influx in nerve terminals was similar to that found for Ca2+ channel currents in syntaxin-expressing oocytes. The specificity of syntaxin for certain types of high voltage-activated channels and not others is in good agreement with that found with cloned Ca2+channel subunits in oocytes (Bezprozvanny et al., 1995) (but see, Wiser et al., 1996, 1999). If anything, P/Q-type channels seemed less responsive to BoTxC1 in synaptosomes than expected from the earlier oocyte data, but this may reflect splice variations in α1A [which in some cases prevent binding to and modulation by syntaxin (Zhong et al., 1999)] or differences in the composition of ancillary subunits. Syntaxin cleavage increased synaptosomal Ca2+ influx during repetitive firing stimulated by 4-AP at least as much as that during steady depolarizations evoked by high K+, consistent with findings with trains of brief depolarizations in oocytes (Degtiar et al., 2000). However, there was one important respect in which the influence of syntaxin in nerve terminals differed significantly from that found in the oocyte expression system. In the synaptosomes, BoNtC1 pretreatment made little difference during the first few seconds of stimulation, but only caused significantly increased Ca2+ entry after prolonged stimulation (Fig. 1). Thus, the syntaxin inhibition was not tonically enabled, but developed gradually with time. In contrast, Ca2+ channel currents in oocytes were diminished from the very beginning of a test depolarization because of decreased availability of Ca2+ channels (Bezprozvanny, Zhong, Scheller, and Tsien, unpublished observations) (Degtiar et al., 2000) spanning the −55 to −60 mV resting potential expected for synaptosomes (Blaustein and Goldring, 1975).
The lack of a significant BoNtC1 effect on early Ca2+ entry in the synaptosomes is consistent with previous findings in other preparations in which investigators have looked for an influence of syntaxin on Ca2+ channel currents. These systems include the squid giant synapse (Marsal et al., 1997; O'Connor et al., 1997; Sugimori et al., 1998), the presynaptic terminals of calyx synapses in chick ciliary ganglia (Stanley and Mirotznik, 1997), presynaptic terminals of Xenopus motoneurons (Rettig et al., 1997), and rat superior cervical ganglion neurons (Mochida et al., 1995, 1996). In each case, application of BoNtC1 to cleave syntaxin, or antibodies to inactivate it, failed to alter peak inward Ca2+ channel current, measured within milliseconds after application of a depolarizing voltage-clamp step. Synaptosomes are well suited for measurements of Ca2+ evoked by persistent or repetitive depolarizations, conditions that uncovered the syntaxin modulation most clearly.
Syntaxin inhibition depends jointly on channel inactivation and vesicular turnover
The progressive development of syntaxin inhibition in synaptosomes suggested that syntaxin trapping of Ca2+channels must lag behind the depolarizing stimulus. Whereas the delay may be attributed in part to the kinetics of slow inactivation (Degtiar et al., 2000), our evidence suggests that it also depends on an event downstream of Ca2+ entry. The development of syntaxin-mediated channel inhibition was delayed until after admission of external Ca2+, even in the wake of a preceding depolarization that had already promoted channel inactivation (Fig. 6). We can be reasonably sure that internal Ca2+ per se is not required for the modulatory action of syntaxin because a striking modulation of Ba2+ currents was found in oocytes even after they had been injected with high concentrations of internal divalent cation buffer (Degtiar et al., 2000). The most likely possibility that remains is that the limiting factor is the availability of syntaxin itself, which is controlled in turn by Ca2+-dependent vesicle fusion and turnover of SNARE complexes. This idea gains support from the positioning of amino acids critical for the effect of syntaxin, alanine240 and valine244 (Bezprozvanny, Zhong, Scheller, and Tsien, unpublished observations), which appear to be buried within the core of the four-helix bundle SNARE complex (Sutton et al., 1998). So long as syntaxin were sequestered in the SNARE complex by interactions with SNAP-25 and VAMP, it would remain incapable of exerting its modulatory effect. If syntaxin only became available to modulate channel activity after bouts of high activity in nerve terminals, these structures would be expected to differ from model systems such as oocytes orAplysia neurons in which syntaxin was deliberately overexpressed. This hypothesis also provides a basis for interpreting our findings with BoNtD and E, neither of which produced a significant change in the pattern of Ca2+ influx or inactivation (Fig. 3C,D), in contrast to BoNtC1. One interpretation is that BoNtD and BoNtE prevent the fusion reaction, but somehow spare the ability of the release machinery to advance in through states in which syntaxin is available to interact with the Ca2+ channel.
Comparison with published effects of vesicular depletion
Our working hypothesis predicts that presynaptic Ca2+ channel function might be significantly affected by depletion of synaptic vesicles. Indeed, such an effect has already been demonstrated in shibire mutants of Drosophila, which undergo a temperature-sensitive block of endocytosis caused by a defect in dynamin (Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983;Ramaswami et al., 1994). Ca2+ influx at the fly neuromuscular junction was completely blocked after vesicle depletion (Umbach et al., 1998), consistent with the idea that excess syntaxin had been made available to inhibit voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. It would be very interesting to see if similar results could be obtained with vesicular depletion in the synaptosomes.
Physiological relevance
The steep power-law relationship between Ca2+ influx and neurotransmitter release (Dodge and Rahamimoff, 1967) ensures that even a modest modulation of Ca2+ channels could have a significant impact on synaptic transmission. In fact, the modulatory effect of syntaxin on synaptosomal Ca2+ influx can be substantial (up to 50%), so the consequences for synaptic transmission could be striking. What role would this modulation play in nerve terminals? At the outset of this study, one possibility was that syntaxin might mediate a rapid form of communication to shut down Ca2+ entry at presynaptic sites. Modulation of presynaptic N-type Ca2+channels had already been hypothesized to help control synaptic refractoriness on a millisecond time scale (Dobrunz et al., 1997). An alternative possibility was that syntaxin might support slow signaling that reflects the average state of the release machinery over an extended period. Our experiments provided a starting point for assessing these possibilities. Based on the results illustrated in Figures 5 and 6, modulation of Ca2+channels by syntaxin is an unlikely mechanism for short-term synaptic refractoriness. On the other hand, syntaxin regulation of Ca2+ influx seems well suited for control of synaptic strength over a span of tens of seconds or minutes. Along these lines, the functional relevance of slow inactivation of presynaptic Ca2+ channels has been demonstrated at a calyx synapse in the brainstem, where conventional depolarizing pulses or trains of brief pulses caused a long-lasting inactivation of presynaptic P-type channels and substantial post-tetanic depression of transmission (Forsythe et al., 1998). The inactivation was dependent on divalent cation entry and required 1–2 min for full recovery, in accord with the modulatory effects described here. Whether syntaxin actually participates in this modulation remains to be seen. Meanwhile, we find it particularly interesting that channel gating and vesicular turnover may both be required to initiate the syntaxin stabilization of the inactivated state. The stabilization would be most powerful during and after bouts of high activity and would link excitable membrane function to internal membrane trafficking.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the Silvio Conte-National Institute of Mental Health Center for Neuroscience Research, the Mathers Charitable Trust, and the McKnight Foundation. We thank D. G. Nicholls for generous assistance with synaptosome preparation and the glutamate release assay and M. E. Adams for the gift of AgaIVB. We are grateful to I. B. Bezprozvanny, V. E. Degtiar, G. S. Pitt, R. H. Scheller, and S. M. Smith for helpful discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Richard W. Tsien, Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Beckman Center B105, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305-5345. E-mail:rwtsien{at}leland.stanford.edu.