Facilitating and nonfacilitating synapses on pyramidal cells: a correlation between physiology and morphology.

Pyramidal cells in piriform cortex receive excitatory inputs from two different sources that are segregated onto adjacent segments of their apical dendrites. The present studies show that excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked by primary olfactory tract afferents that terminate on distal apical segments display paired shock facilitation whereas ESPSs evoked by intrinsic association fibers that terminate on proximal apical segments do not. An ultrastructural comparison of the presynaptic elements of these two fiber systems has revealed that the facilitating olfactory tract afferent synapses have a much lower packing density of synaptic vesicles than do the nonfacilitating association fiber synapses. Further, a search of the literature has revealed that where both morphological and physiological data are available for the same synapses, this same correlation appears to apply. We propose a hypothesis to account for this correlation based on synaptic vesicles to buffer internal calcium and the biochemical characteristics of preterminal calcium-dependent mechanisms affecting the number of vesicles available for release.

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