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Download fileCounting the Number of Glutamate Molecules in Single Synaptic Vesicles
journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-28, 19:11 authored by Yuanmo Wang, Hoda Fathali, Devesh Mishra, Thomas Olsson, Jacqueline D. Keighron, Karolina P. Skibicka, Ann-Sofie CansAnalytical tools for quantitative
measurements of glutamate, the
principal excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain, are lacking. Here,
we introduce a new enzyme-based amperometric sensor technique for
the counting of glutamate molecules stored inside single synaptic
vesicles. In this method, an ultra-fast enzyme-based glutamate sensor
is placed into a solution of isolated synaptic vesicles, which stochastically
rupture at the sensor surface in a potential-dependent manner at a
constant negative potential. The continuous amperometric signals are
sampled at high speed (10 kHz) to record sub-millisecond spikes, which
represent glutamate release from single vesicles that burst open.
Glutamate quantification is achieved by a calibration curve that is
based on measurements of glutamate release from vesicles pre-filled
with various glutamate concentrations. Our measurements show that
an isolated single synaptic vesicle encapsulates about 8000 glutamate
molecules and is comparable to the measured exocytotic quantal glutamate
release in amperometric glutamate sensing in the nucleus accumbens
of mouse brain tissue. Hence, this new methodology introduces the
means to quantify ultra-small amounts of glutamate and to study synaptic
vesicle physiology, pathogenesis, and drug treatments for neuronal
disorders where glutamate is involved.
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record sub-millisecond spikesenzyme-based glutamate sensorSingle Synaptic Vesicles Analytical toolsglutamate releasestudy synaptic vesicle physiologysynaptic vesicle encapsulates8000 glutamate moleculesmouse brain tissueexocytotic quantal glutamate releaseenzyme-based amperometric sensor techniquesynaptic vesicles