Only a Fraction of Quantal Content is Released During Exocytosis as Revealed by Electrochemical Cytometry of Secretory Vesicles
Journal article, 2010

The primary method for neuronal communication involves the release of chemical messengers that are packaged intracellularly in vesicles. Although experiments measuring release at single cells have classically been thought to assess the entire content of vesicles, there is evidence in the literature that suggests that the total transmitter stored in vesicles is not expelled during exocytosis. In this work, we introduce a novel technology using a microfluidic-based platform to electrochemically probe individual PC12 cell vesicles isolated from the cell environment. We measure the total vesicular content using methodology that circumvents the biophysical processes of the cell associated with exocytosis. Direct comparisons of amperometric data from release experiments at single PC12 cells versus our cell-free model reveal that on average vesicles release only 40% of their total transmitter load. The data support the intriguing hypothesis that the average vesicle does not open all the way during the normal exocytosis process, resulting in incomplete distention of the vesicular contents. In addition, we have shown that vesicular catecholamine levels can be altered with pharmacological manipulation and variances observed from these treatments can be resolved at the single vesicle level in a high-throughput manner, a process that we have termed electrochemical cytometry. Upon establishing that release in exocytotic processes proceeds in an incomplete manner, we related electrochemical data quantified from both single cell release experiments and electrochemical cytometry of vesicles to vesicular volume from electron microscopy measurements to investigate the location of intravesicular catecholamine stores retained postfusion.

catecholamine

Vesicle

electrochemical cytometry

partial release

amperometry

exocytosis

Author

Donna M Omiatek

Yan Dong

ML Heien

Andrew Ewing

University of Gothenburg

ACS Chemical Neuroscience

1948-7193 (eISSN)

Vol. 1 3 234-245

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1021/cn900040e

More information

Created

10/10/2017