Activity-dependent calcium sequestration in dendrites of hippocampal neurons in brain slices

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Abstract

Synaptic activity-dependent changes in the spatio-temporal distribution of calcium ions regulate important neuronal functions such as dendritic integration and synaptic plasticity, but the processes that terminate the free Ca2+ transients associated with these changes remain unclear. We have characterized at the electron microscopic level the intracellular compartments involved in buffering free Ca2+ transients in dendritic cytoplasm of CA3 neurons by measuring the larger changes in the concentrations of total Ca that persist for several minutes after neuronal activity. Quantitative energy-dispersive x-ray microanalysis of cryosections from hippocampal slice cultures rapidly frozen 3 min after afferent synaptic activity identified a subset of dendritic endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as a high-capacity Ca2+ buffer. Calcium sequestration by cisterns of this subset of ER was graded, reversible, and dependent on a thapsigargin-sensitive Ca2+-ATPase. Sequestration was so robust that after repetitive high- frequency stimulation the Ca content of responsive ER cisterns increased as much as 20-fold. These results demonstrate that a subpopulation of ER is the major dendritic Ca sequestration compartment in the minutes after neuronal activity.

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Pozzo-Miller, L. D., Pivovarova, N. B., Leapman, R. D., Buchanan, R. A., Reese, T. S., & Andrews, S. B. (1997). Activity-dependent calcium sequestration in dendrites of hippocampal neurons in brain slices. Journal of Neuroscience, 17(22), 8729–8738. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.17-22-08729.1997

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