PUBLICATION

The Impact of Multivesicular Release on the Transmission of Sensory Information by Ribbon Synapses

Authors
James, B., Piekarz, P., Moya-Diaz, J., Lagnado, L.
ID
ZDB-PUB-221109-1
Date
2022
Source
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience   42(50): 9401-9414 (Journal)
Registered Authors
James, Ben, Lagnado, Leon
Keywords
none
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Female
  • Male
  • Mammals
  • Retina/physiology
  • Retinal Bipolar Cells
  • Synapses/physiology
  • Synaptic Transmission/physiology
  • Synaptic Vesicles*/physiology
  • Zebrafish*
PubMed
36344266 Full text @ J. Neurosci.
Abstract
The statistics of vesicle release determine how synapses transfer information but the classical Poisson model of independent release does not always hold at the first stages of vision and hearing. There, ribbon synapses also encode sensory signals as events comprising two or more vesicles released simultaneously. The implications of such coordinated multivesicular release (MVR) for spike generation are not known. Here we investigate how MVR alters the transmission of sensory information compared to Poisson synapses employing a pure rate code. We used leaky integrate-and-fire models incorporating the statistics of release measured experimentally from glutamatergic synapses of retinal bipolar cells in zebrafish (both sexes) and compared these with models assuming Poisson inputs constrained to operate at the same average rates. We find that MVR can increase the number of spikes generated per vesicle while reducing interspike intervals and latency to first spike. The combined effect was to increase the efficiency of information transfer (bits per vesicle) over a range of conditions mimicking target neurons of different size. MVR was most advantageous in neurons with short time-constants and reliable synaptic inputs, when less convergence was required to trigger spikes. In the special case of a single input driving a neuron, as occurs in the auditory system of mammals, MVR increased information transfer whenever spike generation required more than one vesicle. This study demonstrates how presynaptic integration of vesicles by MVR can increase the efficiency with which sensory information is transmitted compared to a rate code described by Poisson statistics.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT:Neurons communicate by the stochastic release of vesicles at the synapse and the statistics of this process will determine how information is represented by spikes. The classical model is that vesicles are released independently by a Poisson process, but this does not hold at ribbon-type synapses specialized to transmit the first electrical signals in vision and hearing, where two or more vesicles can fuse in a single event by a process termed coordinated multivesicular release (MVR). James et al. show that MVR can increase the number of spikes generated per vesicle and the efficiency of information transfer (bits per vesicle) over a range of conditions found in the retina and peripheral auditory system.
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