Intracellular Electrochemical Nanomeasurements Reveal that Exocytosis of Molecules at Living Neurons is Subquantal and Complex
Anna Larsson, Soodabeh Majdi, Alexander Oleinick (PASTEUR), Irina Svir, (PASTEUR), Johan Dunevall, Christian Amatore (PASTEUR), Andrew Ewing

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that exocytosis in living neurons involves partial, subquantal release of molecules, revealing a complex and regulated process that contrasts with the traditional all-or-none model, with implications for neural communication.
Contribution
The paper provides direct electrochemical evidence that exocytosis in living neurons involves subquantal, partial release of neurotransmitters, challenging the classical all-or-none paradigm.
Findings
Only 4.5% of vesicular content is released in simple events.
10.7% of vesicular content is released in complex events.
Partial release allows for presynaptic plasticity and regulation.
Abstract
Since the early work of Bernard Katz, the process of cellular chemical communication via exocytosis, quantal release, has been considered to be all or none. Recent evidence has shown exocytosis to be partial or 'subquantal' at single-cell model systems, but there is a need to understand this at communicating nerve cells. Partial release allows nerve cells to control the signal at the site of release during individual events, where the smaller the fraction released, the greater the range of regulation. Here we show that the fraction of the vesicular octopamine content released from a living Drosophila larval neuromuscular neuron is very small. The percentage of released molecules was found to be only 4.5% for simple events and 10.7% for complex (i.e., oscillating or flickering) events. This large content, combined with partial release controlled by fluctuations of the fusion pore, offers…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
