Fast-Freeze Snapshot Yields
New Picture
Of Nerve-Muscle Junction
When nerve cells excite muscle fibers to flex,
getting synaptic proteins and components into the right place can
mean the difference between feats of strength or lapses of drowsy
lethargy.
Several proteins that have been shown to be major
players in synaptic transmission have now been studied using a flash-freeze
physical-fixation technique that reveals new details of their location
and function in neuromuscular synapses.
Investigators report the finding in the Aug. 2
issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. Janet Richmond, associate
professor of biological sciences at the University of Illinois at
Chicago (www.uic.edu),
is the corresponding author.
Previously, Richmond developed a technique that
allows a more precise understanding of how synaptic proteins affect
release of neurotransmitter chemicals at the junctions -- the signal
that enables nerve cells to issue commands.
The technique described in the new study, high-pressure
freeze electron microscopy and immuno-gold staining, now provides
an accurate picture of where these synaptic proteins cluster --
information previously unknown to scientists.
"It's a new technique that allows us to take
a snapshot of what's going on at the neuromuscular junction and
actually physically view the consequences of losing these proteins,"
said Richmond.
The conventional technique is to use gluteraldhyde
fixation, which takes seconds or minutes to complete -- unlike the
fraction of a second when using the high-pressure freeze method.
What's more, during gluteraldhyde fixation the nematodes writhe
around, releasing neurotransmitters while cells become dehydrated,
causing synaptic components to get misplaced and synapses to take
on a wrinkly appearance.
While slow freezing can create ice crystals that
tear cell structures apart, the high-pressure technique, using liquid
nitrogen to flash-freeze at minus-180 degrees Celsius, makes ice
appear like liquid glass and devoid of destructive crystals.
Cross-sections taken of synapses reveal that membrane
packets, or vesicles, of neurotransmitter localize in places scientists
have never before seen.
Richmond said the conventional gluteraldhyde fixation
technique was the problem with the earlier view of vesicle positioning
in nerve synapses, and she predicted that future use of the new
technique will open up new discoveries of the roles various proteins
play in nerve synapses. |