Overview Some authors consider signal transmission at a chemical synapse as a special case of
paracrine signaling., while others treat it a separate signaling mechanism. Here is a summary of the sequence of events that take place in synaptic transmission from a presynaptic neuron to a postsynaptic cell. Each step is explained in more detail below. Note that with the exception of the final step, the entire process may run only a few hundred microseconds, in the fastest synapses. • The process begins with a wave of electrochemical excitation called an
action potential traveling along the membrane of the presynaptic cell, until it reaches the synapse. • The electrical
depolarization of the membrane at the synapse causes channels to open that are permeable to calcium ions. • Calcium ions flow through the presynaptic membrane, rapidly increasing the calcium concentration in the interior. • The high calcium concentration activates a set of calcium-sensitive proteins attached to
vesicles that contain a
neurotransmitter chemical. • These proteins change shape, causing the membranes of some "docked" vesicles to fuse with the membrane of the presynaptic cell, thereby opening the vesicles and dumping their neurotransmitter contents into the synaptic cleft, the narrow space between the membranes of the pre- and postsynaptic cells. • The neurotransmitter diffuses within the cleft. Some of it escapes, but some of it binds to
chemical receptor molecules located on the membrane of the postsynaptic cell. • The binding of neurotransmitter causes the receptor molecule to be
activated in some way. Several types of activation are possible, as described in more detail below. In any case, this is the key step by which the synaptic process affects the behavior of the postsynaptic cell. • Due to
thermal vibration, the motion of atoms, vibrating about their equilibrium positions in a crystalline solid, neurotransmitter molecules eventually break loose from the receptors and drift away. • The neurotransmitter is either reabsorbed by the presynaptic cell, and then repackaged for future release, or else it is broken down metabolically.
Neurotransmitter release The release of a neurotransmitter is triggered by the arrival of a nerve impulse (or
action potential) and occurs through an unusually rapid process of cellular secretion (
exocytosis). Within the presynaptic nerve terminal,
vesicles containing neurotransmitter are localized near the synaptic membrane. The arriving action potential produces an influx of
calcium ions through
voltage-dependent, calcium-selective ion channels at the down stroke of the action potential (tail current). Calcium ions then bind to
synaptotagmin proteins found within the membranes of the synaptic vesicles, allowing the vesicles to fuse with the presynaptic membrane. The fusion of a vesicle is a
stochastic process, leading to frequent failure of synaptic transmission at the very small synapses that are typical for the
central nervous system. Large chemical synapses (e.g. the
neuromuscular junction), on the other hand, have a synaptic release probability, in effect, of 1.
Vesicle fusion is driven by the action of a set of proteins in the presynaptic terminal known as
SNAREs. As a whole, the protein complex or structure that mediates the docking and fusion of presynaptic vesicles is called the active zone. The membrane added by the fusion process is later retrieved by
endocytosis and
recycled for the formation of fresh neurotransmitter-filled vesicles. An exception to the general trend of neurotransmitter release by vesicular fusion is found in the type II receptor cells of mammalian
taste buds. Here the neurotransmitter
ATP is released directly from the cytoplasm into the synaptic cleft via voltage gated channels.
Receptor binding Receptors on the opposite side of the synaptic gap bind neurotransmitter molecules. Receptors can respond in either of two general ways. First, the receptors may directly open
ligand-gated ion channels in the postsynaptic cell membrane, causing ions to enter or exit the cell and changing the local
transmembrane potential. • Enzymes within the subsynaptic membrane may inactivate/metabolize the neurotransmitter. •
Reuptake pumps may actively pump the neurotransmitter back into the presynaptic
axon terminal for reprocessing and re-release following a later action potential. The amplitude of a PSP can be modulated by
neuromodulators or can change as a result of previous activity. Changes in the synaptic strength can be short-term, lasting seconds to minutes, or long-term (
long-term potentiation, or LTP), lasting hours. Learning and memory are believed to result from long-term changes in synaptic strength, via a mechanism known as
synaptic plasticity. ==Receptor desensitization==