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VARIABLES

MILLISECOND SCALE (Action Potential → Release)

Variable Direct Behavior/Effect Modulated By (Same Scale) Modulated By (Other Scales)
V_mem • AP depolarization
• K⁺-mediated repolarization
KChannels activation
• Na⁺ channel inactivation
ATP (seconds) - powers Na⁺/K⁺ pump
K+ accumulation (tens-ms)
VGCC • Ca²⁺ influx triggered by depolarization
• Ca²⁺-dependent inactivation
V_mem (depolarization)
Ca+ microdomain (feedback)
VGCC invagination (hours) - reduces surface expression
BDNF (hours) - increases expression
Ca+ (microdomain) • Rapid spike near VGCCs (~10-100 μM)
• Triggers vesicle fusion
VGCC opening kinetics
• Endogenous buffers
CaChannels density (hours)
NO (seconds) - modulates channel opening
Vesicles (fusion) • SNARE-mediated fusion with membrane
• Release probability (Pr) varies
Ca+ concentration⁴
RRP position/docking
ATP (seconds) - fuels priming
eCB (seconds) - inhibits release
K+ (efflux) • Repolarization via KChannels
• Clears AP
V_mem (depolarization)
Ca+ (activates SK channels)
KChannels modulation (minutes)
KChannels • Voltage-gated opening
• Ca²⁺-activated (SK)
V_mem
Ca+ microdomain
Phosphorylation (minutes)
BDNF (hours) - modulates expression

TENS-HUNDREDS OF MILLISECONDS SCALE (Short-term Dynamics)

Variable Direct Behavior/Effect Modulated By (Same Scale) Modulated By (Other Scales)
Ca+ (global) • Bulk terminal increase (~0.5-2 μM)
• Activates mobilization
• Diffusion from microdomains
• PMCA/NCX pumps
ATP (seconds) - fuels pumps
Lactate (seconds) - supports mitochondrial uptake
Vesicles (mobilization) • Movement from RPRRP
• Docked vesicles become release-ready
Ca+ global concentration
RRP depletion state
Mobilization rate (hours) - structural adaptation
ATP (seconds) - fuels transport
RRP • Immediate release pool (~5-15 vesicles)
• Depletes with high-frequency firing
Vesicles release (ms)
Vesicles mobilization into RRP
RP size (minutes)
BDNF (hours) - increases docking sites
K+ (cleft accumulation) • Extracellular K⁺ rises to ~8-12 mM
• Affects resting potential
KChannels activity (ms)
• Astrocyte/glia uptake
Activity history (minutes) - astrocyte adaptation
eCB • Retrograde diffusion to presynapse
• Binds CB1 receptors (~100-500 ms)
• Postsynaptic Ca²⁺ rise (ms)
• mGluR activation
Activity patterns (minutes) - regulates production
NO (seconds) - can enhance eCB synthesis

SECONDS-MINUTES SCALE (Metabolic & Signaling)

Variable Direct Behavior/Effect Modulated By (Same Scale) Modulated By (Other Scales)
ATP • Fuels: pumps, vesicle cycling, protein phosphorylation
• Depletes with high activity
Lactate conversion
• Mitochondrial respiration
Activity demand (ms scale)
BDNF (hours) - enhances mitochondrial function
Lactate • Astrocyte→neuron shuttle
• Converted to pyruvate for ATP
• Glutamate uptake by astrocytes
• Glycogen breakdown
Activity level (ms-min)
NO (seconds) - regulates blood flow
NO • Retrograde diffusion from postsynapse
• Activates presynaptic cGMP pathways
• Postsynaptic NOS activation by Ca²⁺
• NMDA receptor activity
Activity patterns (minutes)
BDNF (hours) - regulates NOS expression
RP • Reserve vesicle pool (~100-500 vesicles)
• Slowly replenishes RRP
Vesicles recycling
Vesicles mobilization out of RP
RP capacity (hours) - structural changes
ATP (seconds) - fuels vesicle refilling
BDNF • Retrograde transport (slow)
• Activates TrkB receptors
• Activity-dependent release from postsynapse
• Local translation
Ca+ integration (minutes)
eCB (minutes) - can modulate release
eCB (persistent) • Long-term depression (LTD) induction
• Alters release probability
• Sustained postsynaptic activity
• DAG lipase activation
NO (seconds) - synergistic effects
BDNF (hours) - can counteract eCB-LTD

SECONDS-HOURS-DAYS SCALE (Structural Modulation)

Variable Modulatory Behavior Influenced By Effects on Faster Scales
VGCC (invagination) • Internalization of channels
• Reduces release probability
Ca+ integral (minutes of activity)
BDNF (trophic support)
eCB (chronic signaling)
• ↓ Ca+ influx (ms)
• ↓ Vesicles release probability (ms)
CaChannels (density) • Changes in VGCC number at active zone BDNF-TrkB signaling (hours)
• Homeostatic scaling (days)
• Activity history (integrated Ca+)
• Alters Ca+ microdomain (ms)
• Changes short-term plasticity (tens-ms)
RP (pool size) • Structural changes in vesicle reserves BDNF (enhances)
• Chronic eCB (reduces)
• Metabolic capacity (ATP/Lactate supply)
• Changes RRP refilling rate (tens-ms)
• Alters sustained release (seconds)
Vesicles (mobilization rate) • Faster/slower RP→RRP trafficking BDNF-cytoskeletal remodeling
• Synapsin phosphorylation state (Ca+ history)
• Alters short-term facilitation/depression (tens-ms)
KChannels (expression) • Changes in Kv channel density • Activity-dependent gene regulation
BDNF modulation
K+ homeostasis needs
• Alters AP waveform and duration (ms)
• Changes firing frequency adaptation

CROSS-VARIABLE FEEDBACK LOOPS

Fast Release → Metabolic Support Loop

V_mem (AP) → VGCC opening → Ca+ influx → Vesicles release
  ↓
Glutamate release → Astrocyte activation → Lactate production
  ↓
Lactate → ATP synthesis → Fuels: VGCC recycling, Vesicles priming, Ca+ pumps

Activity → Structural Adaptation Loop

High activity → Ca+ accumulation → BDNF release (post→pre)
  ↓
BDNF → ↑ VGCC expression, ↑ RP size, ↑ mobilization rate
  ↓
Enhanced release capacity → Changes Ca+ dynamics → Homeostatic adjustment

Retrograde Modulation Network

Postsynaptic: Ca+ → NO production → Presynaptic: cGMP → Modulates VGCC
          ↓                                    ↓
Postsynaptic: Ca+ → eCB production → Presynaptic: CB1 → Inhibits VGCC, ↓ release
          ↓
Postsynaptic: Ca+ → BDNF synthesis → Presynaptic: TrkB → ↑ VGCC, ↑ RP

Energy-Redistribution Loop

High activity → ATP depletion → Activates AMPK → ↑ Lactate uptake
      ↓                               ↓
Reduced release probability   ↑ Mitochondrial biogenesis (days)
      ↓                               ↓
Lower Ca+ demand             Enhanced ATP production

KEY VARIABLE INTERDEPENDENCIES

  1. VGCCCa+ (bidirectional):
    • VGCC opening → Ca+ influx
    • Ca+ accumulation → VGCC modulation (inactivation/adaptation)
  2. ATP as universal modulator:
    • Required for: V_mem maintenance, Ca+ clearance, Vesicles cycling, RP refilling
    • Limited ATP → affects all faster processes
  3. BDNF as structural organizer:
    • Coordinates: VGCC expression, RP size, KChannels density, metabolic capacity
  4. Ca+ as integration signal:
    • Fast: triggers Vesicles release (ms)
    • Medium: regulates Vesicles mobilization (tens-ms)
    • Slow: drives structural changes via BDNF/NO (minutes-hours)
  5. K+/KChannels as activity brakes:
    • Regulate AP duration and frequency
    • Homeostatically adjusted based on activity history

This framework shows how your specified variables interact across timescales, with each variable playing multiple roles depending on the temporal context.




ATP: The Multiscale Energy Integrator

ATP's Roles Across Temporal Scales

1. MILLISECOND SCALE (Emergency Power)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • VGCC recovery: Rapid phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles
  • SNARE priming: ATP hydrolysis by NSF for vesicle fusion competence
  • Na⁺/K⁺ pump: Immediate AP recovery (3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in per ATP)

Influences on Other Variables:

  • ATP → Slower V_mem repolarization (K⁺ pump impaired)
  • ATP → Reduced VGCC recovery from inactivation
  • ATP → Impaired Vesicles priming → ↓ release probability

Critical Threshold: <0.1s depletion → immediate release failure

2. TENS-HUNDREDS OF MS SCALE (Short-term Energy Buffer)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Ca²⁺ clearance: PMCA pumps (1 Ca²⁺ out per ATP)
  • Vesicle mobilization: Myosin/kinesin ATPases for RP→RRP movement
  • Endocytosis initiation: Clathrin coat assembly (early phase)

Energy Dynamics:

  • Activity spike: 1 AP → ~20,000 ATP molecules consumed
  • Buffer capacity: ~10⁸ ATP molecules in terminal → supports ~500 APs
  • Recovery rate: ~5 ATP/ms production at maximum mitochondrial output

Cross-scale Coupling:

  • High Ca+ influx → ↑ mitochondrial Ca²⁺ uptake → ↑ ATP production (seconds)
  • K+ accumulation → activates Na⁺/K⁺ pump → ↑ ATP demand
  • Lactate conversion → ~15 ATP per lactate (delayed supply)

3. SECOND-MINUTE SCALE (Metabolic Regulation Hub)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Vesicle recycling: Complete endocytosis-exocytosis cycle (~30 ATP/vesicle)
  • Neurotransmitter reloading: Vacuolar H⁺-ATPase (2 H⁺/ATP) → glutamate uptake
  • RP refilling: New vesicle synthesis and transport

Regulatory Functions:

  • ATP/ADP ratio as metabolic sensor:
    • High ATP: AMPK inactive → growth/maintenance
    • Low ATP: AMPK active → emergency response, ↓ protein synthesis
  • Glycogen shunt: Terminal glycogen → lactate (backup, seconds)
  • Mitochondrial positioning: ATP gradients guide movement to active zones

Modulation by Other Variables:

  • BDNF → ↑ mitochondrial biogenesis → ↑ ATP capacity (hours)
  • NO → regulates cytochrome c oxidase → modulates ATP production
  • eCB → CB1 receptors inhibit adenylate cyclase → ↓ ATP synthesis

4. HOURS-DAYS SCALE (Structural Energy Budget)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Protein synthesis: ~4 ATP per peptide bond → VGCCs, vesicle proteins
  • Organelle biogenesis: Mitochondria, ER, vesicle pools
  • Axonal transport: Kinesin/dynein motors (1 ATP/8 nm step)

Long-term ATP Allocation Decisions:

High activity + Adequate ATP → Investment in:
  1. More VGCCs (increased Ca²⁺ capacity)
  2. Larger RP (more vesicles)
  3. Additional mitochondria (future capacity)

High activity + Limited ATP → Conservation mode:
  1. VGCC invagination (lower Pr, save energy)
  2. Reduced RP size (lower maintenance cost)
  3. Enhanced lactate uptake (external energy)

BDNF-ATP Synergy:

  • BDNF signals "importance" → allocates ATP to structural growth
  • ATP availability determines BDNF effect magnitude
  • Negative feedback: Low ATP → ↓ TrkB trafficking → ↓ BDNF sensitivity

ATP as Cross-Scale Communication Channel

Energy Status Signaling:

Fast signal (ms): ATP/ADP ratio at active zone → immediate release probability
Medium signal (s): AMPK activation → mobilize energy reserves
Slow signal (hours): PGC-1α activation → mitochondrial biogenesis

Activity-Energy Feedback Loops:

Positive Feedback (Dangerous):

High activity → Ca²⁺ overload → mitochondrial damage → ↓ ATP
↓ ATP → impaired Ca²⁺ clearance → more Ca²⁺ overload → more damage
↓ ATP → reduced Na⁺/K⁺ pump → depolarization → more VGCC opening
Result: Excitotoxicity

Negative Feedback (Protective):

High activity → ATP depletion → AMPK activation
AMPK → ↓ protein synthesis (conserves ATP)
AMPK → ↑ glucose transporters (enhances supply)
AMPK → ↓ VGCC expression (reduces demand)
Result: Homeostasis

ATP-Dependent Plasticity Gates:

"Energy Checkpoint" for Structural Changes:

Question: Should synapse grow?
Inputs: BDNF signal (importance) + Ca²⁺ history (activity) + ATP availability
Decision rule:
  IF (BDNF high AND ATP adequate) → GROW
  IF (BDNF high AND ATP low) → INVAGINATE (save energy)
  IF (BDNF low AND ATP high) → MAINTAIN
  IF (BDNF low AND ATP low) → SHRINK

Specific ATP ↔ Variable Interactions

ATP ↔ Lactate (Critical Partnership)

  • Astrocyte lactate → neuron → pyruvate → 15 ATP via TCA cycle
  • Activity-dependent coupling: Glutamate uptake → astrocyte glycolysis → lactate export
  • Timescale: Seconds for lactate transport, minutes for glycogen mobilization

ATP ↔ VGCC (Bidirectional)

  • ATP → VGCC: Phosphorylation modulates opening kinetics (ms)
  • VGCC → ATP demand: Each Ca²⁺ ion requires 1 ATP for extrusion
  • Homeostatic setpoint: VGCC density adjusted to match ATP production capacity

ATP ↔ RP Size (Energy Budget)

  • Storage cost: ~100 ATP/day per vesicle (maintenance + turnover)
  • Allocation decision: ATP surplus → more vesicles; deficit → fewer vesicles
  • Dynamic adjustment: RP shrinks within hours of ATP shortage

ATP ↔ K⁺/KChannels (Stability Control)

  • Na⁺/K⁺ pump: 1 ATP clears 3 Na⁺, brings 2 K⁺
  • K⁺ accumulation without ATP → depolarization → runaway excitation
  • KChannels require ATP for phosphorylation-dependent modulation

Clinical/Experimental Implications

Energy-Limited Plasticity:

  • Learning under low ATP (sleep deprivation, metabolic stress) → less structural change
  • High ATP + BDNF → optimal plasticity window

Therapeutic Targets:

  • Enhance lactate shuttle → support ATP during high demand
  • Modulate AMPK → shift energy allocation decisions
  • Mitochondrial support → increase ATP capacity for structural changes

Measurement Approaches:

  • FRET ATP sensors: Real-time ATP dynamics (seconds)
  • ATP/ADP ratio: Metabolic status (minutes)
  • Mitochondrial density: ATP capacity (hours-days)

Summary: ATP as Presynaptic "Bank Account"

Quick cash (ms): ATP at active zone → immediate transactions
Checking account (100ms): Cytosolic ATP → short-term operations
Savings account (seconds): Mitochondrial/phosphocreatine → buffer
Investment portfolio (hours): Structural changes → long-term capacity
Credit line (emergency): Lactate shuttle → external support

The presynaptic terminal's ATP management strategy determines:

  • Release fidelity (ms scale)
  • Short-term plasticity (100ms scale)
  • Sustained transmission (second scale)
  • Structural adaptation (hour-day scale)

Every plasticity decision is fundamentally an energy allocation decision, with ATP serving as both the currency and the accountant.




Ca²⁺: The Universal Presynaptic Signal

Ca²⁺ Across Temporal Scales

1. MILLISECOND SCALE (Nano/Submicrodomain Ca²⁺)

Direct Behaviors Triggered:

  • Vesicle fusion: Cooperative binding to synaptotagmin (n~4)
  • KChannel activation: SK channels open → fast afterhyperpolarization
  • VGCC feedback: Ca²⁺-dependent inactivation (CDI)

Dynamics:

  • Rise time: <100 μs to peak
  • Decay time constant: 200-500 μs (fast buffers)
  • Diffusion coefficient: ~200 μm²/s (buffered)

Influences on Other Variables:

Ca²⁺ (ms) → Vesicles release: Exponential dependence (EC₅₀ ~ 10-25 μM)
Ca²⁺ (ms) → KChannels (SK): Fast AHP → modulates next AP
Ca²⁺ (ms) → VGCC: CDI reduces subsequent Ca²⁺ influx

2. TENS-HUNDREDS OF MS SCALE (Global Terminal Ca²⁺)

Spatial Integration:

  • Bulk concentration: 0.2-2 μM throughout terminal
  • Residual Ca²⁺: 0.1-0.5 μM between APs

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Vesicle mobilization: Ca²⁺-dependent phosphatase activation (calcineurin)
  • Short-term plasticity:
    • Facilitation: Residual Ca²⁺ binds to synaptotagmin priming
    • Augmentation: Sustained Ca²⁺ activates CaMKII
  • Metabolic coupling: Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ uptake initiation

Cross-scale Interactions:

Ca²⁺ (100ms) → NO production: Activates postsynaptic NOS → retrograde signal
Ca²⁺ (100ms) → eCB synthesis: Postsynaptic DAG lipase activation
Ca²⁺ (100ms) → RP→RRP: Calcineurin dephosphorylates synapsin
Ca²⁺ (100ms) → ATP demand: Each Ca²⁺ extruded requires 1 ATP

Mathematical Representation:

d[Ca²⁺]_global/dt = J_influx - J_pump - J_mitochondria - J_diffusion
where:
  J_influx ∝ Σ(VGCC_open) over recent APs
  J_pump = V_max·[Ca²⁺]/(K_m + [Ca²⁺]) (ATP-dependent)
  J_mitochondria = k_m·[Ca²⁺]·(ΔΨ_m - threshold)

3. SECOND-MINUTE SCALE (Signaling Ca²⁺)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Gene expression: Nuclear Ca²⁺ → CREB phosphorylation
  • Metabolic regulation: Mitochondrial matrix Ca²⁺ → TCA cycle enzymes
  • Structural tagging: Local Ca²⁺ waves mark active synapses

Signal Integration Mechanisms:

  • Frequency decoding: Ca²⁺ spikes → NFAT activation
  • Amplitude decoding: High Ca²⁺ → CamKII autophosphorylation
  • Duration decoding: Sustained Ca²⁺ → MAPK pathway activation

Modulation by Other Variables:

ATP ↓ → Reduced Ca²⁺ clearance → Elevated baseline Ca²⁺
BDNF → Enhances Ca²⁺ signals via PLCγ→IP₃→ER release
NO → cGMP → PKG → modulates Ca²⁺ channels and pumps
Lactate → Supports mitochondrial Ca²⁺ uptake via ATP

4. HOURS-DAYS SCALE (Ca²⁺ as Structural Organizer)

Direct Behaviors Enabled:

  • Synapse growth/shrinkage: Ca²⁺-dependent gene expression programs
  • Homeostatic scaling: Chronic Ca²⁺ levels set VGCC density
  • Metaplasticity: Ca²⁺ history determines future plasticity rules

Ca²⁺ Setpoints and Homeostasis:

  • Target baseline: 50-100 nM (resting)
  • Activity setpoint: Integrated over hours determines structural changes
  • Memory window: Ca²⁺ history of last 24-48 hours influences current state

Ca²⁺ as Information Encoder

Temporal Coding by Ca²⁺:

Amplitude Encoding:

  • Single AP: ~0.5 μM global Ca²⁺
  • 10 Hz train: ~1.5 μM global Ca²⁺
  • 100 Hz burst: >5 μM global Ca²⁺

Frequency Encoding:

  • Low frequency (<1 Hz): Discrete Ca²⁺ transients
  • Theta (4-8 Hz): Partial summation
  • Gamma (30-100 Hz): Sustained elevation

Duration Encoding:

  • Brief (<100 ms): Fast signaling only
  • Medium (1-10 s): Activates kinases
  • Long (>1 min): Triggers gene expression

Spatial Coding by Ca²⁺:

Microdomain vs Global Signals:

VGCC cluster 1 → Ca²⁺ microdomain 1 → Vesicles 1-3
VGCC cluster 2 → Ca²⁺ microdomain 2 → Vesicles 4-6
Diffusion → Global Ca²⁺ → Mobilization, metabolic signals

Compartmentalization:

  • Active zone: Release-triggering (fast)
  • Vesicle pools: Mobilization (medium)
  • Mitochondria: Metabolic coupling (slow)
  • Nucleus: Gene regulation (very slow)

Ca²⁺ ↔ Specific Variable Interactions

Ca²⁺ ↔ VGCC (Bidirectional Control)

Fast (ms): Ca²⁺-dependent inactivation (CDI) - negative feedback
Medium (s): Ca²⁺-dependent facilitation (CDF) - positive feedback
Slow (hours): Ca²⁺-dependent VGCC expression - homeostatic

Ca²⁺ ↔ ATP (Energy-Coupling)

  • Ca²⁺ → ATP demand: Each Ca²⁺ ion requires 1 ATP for extrusion
  • Ca²⁺ → ATP production: Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ stimulates TCA cycle
  • ATP → Ca²⁺ handling: ATP fuels pumps, buffers, organelle uptake

Ca²⁺ ↔ BDNF (Trophic Loop)

Presynaptic: Ca²⁺ influx → Vesicle release → Glutamate
Postsynaptic: Glutamate → NMDA → Ca²⁺ → BDNF synthesis
Retrograde: BDNF → Presynaptic TrkB → Enhanced Ca²⁺ signals

Ca²⁺ ↔ eCB (Retrograde Modulation)

Postsynaptic: Ca²⁺ + mGluR → DAG → 2-AG synthesis
Retrograde: eCB → Presynaptic CB1 → Inhibits VGCC
Feedback: Reduced Ca²⁺ → Less glutamate → Less eCB

Ca²⁺ ↔ Lactate (Metabolic Feedback)

Presynaptic Ca²⁺ → Glutamate release → Astrocyte uptake
Astrocyte: Glutamate → Na⁺ influx → Glycolysis → Lactate
Lactate → Presynaptic → ATP → Supports Ca²⁺ handling

Ca²⁺ ↔ K⁺/KChannels (Excitability Control)

Ca²⁺ → SK channels → K⁺ efflux → Fast AHP → Limits firing
K⁺ accumulation → Depolarization → More VGCC opening → More Ca²⁺
Ca²⁺ → BK channels → Faster repolarization → Shorter AP

Ca²⁺-Dependent Plasticity Rules

Short-term Rules (ms-s):

Residual Ca²⁺ model: RRP release ∝ [Ca²⁺]_residual^n
Facilitation: PPR = 1 + ([Ca²⁺]_residual/EC₅₀) 
Depression: Vesicle depletion rate ∝ [Ca²⁺]_peak

Long-term Rules (min-days):

BCM-like rule: 
  if [Ca²⁺]_avg < θ₁ → Downscale (LTD)
  if θ₁ < [Ca²⁺]_avg < θ₂ → No change
  if [Ca²⁺]_avg > θ₂ → Upscale (LTP)
  
θ₁ and θ₂ adjust based on Ca²⁺ history (metaplasticity)

Structural Rules:

VGCC expression rate = k₁·[Ca²⁺]_integral - k₂·[VGCC]
RP size = k₃·BDNF·[Ca²⁺]_avg - k₄·[RP]
Where BDNF itself depends on Ca²⁺ history

Clinical/Experimental Implications

Ca²⁺ Dysregulation Pathologies:

  • Excitotoxicity: Chronic high Ca²⁺ → mitochondrial failure → cell death
  • Synaptic fatigue: Impaired Ca²⁺ clearance → reduced dynamic range
  • Plasticity disorders: Altered Ca²⁺ setpoints → LTP/LTD imbalance

Measurement Approaches:

  • Fast dyes (Fluo-4FF): Microdomain Ca²⁺ (ms)
  • GCaMP variants: Global Ca²⁺ (10-100 ms resolution)
  • Ca²⁺ integrators (CaMKII): History over minutes
  • Structural readouts: VGCC clustering, vesicle pools (hours-days)

Therapeutic Targets:

  • VGCC blockers: Reduce pathological Ca²⁺ influx
  • Ca²⁺ buffer enhancers: Improve clearance
  • Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ uptake: Protect against excitotoxicity
  • Ca²⁺ setpoint modulators: Restore homeostatic balance

Summary: Ca²⁺ as Multiscale Integrator

Microscale (ms): Release trigger → Digital signal (vesicle fusion/no fusion)
Mesoscale (100ms): Plasticity mediator → Analog signal (facilitation/depression)
Macroscale (min): Metabolic regulator → Energy allocation signal
Macroscale (hours): Structural organizer → Growth/retraction signal

Key Principles:

  1. Dual signaling: Microdomain (fast, local) vs Global (slow, integrative)
  2. Timescale-specific effectors: Different targets at different Ca²⁺ durations
  3. Bidirectional coupling: Ca²⁺ influences everything, everything influences Ca²⁺
  4. Setpoint homeostasis: Systems maintain optimal Ca²⁺ levels across timescales
  5. Memory encoding: Ca²⁺ history changes future Ca²⁺ handling

The Ca²⁺ Paradox: The same ion that triggers millisecond release also organizes day-scale structural changes, with no contradiction because:

  • Different concentrations activate different effectors
  • Different durations engage different signaling pathways
  • Different localizations communicate different information
  • Different frequencies encode different messages

Ca²⁺ is not just a signal—it's the alphabet of presynaptic communication, with its timing, amplitude, and location forming words, sentences, and stories across timescales.




CDI

Ca²⁺-dependent inactivation is a rapid negative feedback mechanism where VGCCs self-regulate by closing more quickly when Ca²⁺ ions bind to specific sites on the channel itself. This happens within milliseconds of channel opening.

Sequence of Events:

text

1. VGCC opens → Ca²⁺ influx through pore
2. Ca²⁺ binds to CaM already tethered to channel (microdomain Ca²⁺ ~10-100 μM)
3. Ca²⁺/CaM complex conformation change
4. Ca²⁺/CaM binds to IQ domain
5. Channel pore undergoes conformational change → CLOSES
6. Channel enters inactivated state (refractory to reopening)

Timing:

  • Onset: Within 5-50 ms of channel opening
  • Full inactivation: 100-300 ms
  • Recovery: 100-1000 ms (requires Ca²⁺ unbinding)

Functional Significance in Presynapse

Millisecond Timescale Effects:

Effect Consequence
Shortens Ca²⁺ influx duration Limits total Ca²⁺ per action potential
Prevents Ca²⁺ overload Protects against excitotoxicity
Filters high-frequency firing Channels inactivate during trains
Shapes AP-evoked Ca²⁺ transients Determines Ca²⁺ waveform

Impact on Vesicle Release:

text

Without CDI: Sustained Ca²⁺ influx → higher Pr, more vesicles released
With CDI: Brief Ca²⁺ influx → lower Pr, fewer vesicles released
CDI modulation: Alters release probability dynamically

Short-term Plasticity Implications:

  • High-frequency trains: CDI accumulates → less Ca²⁺ per AP → depression
  • Recovery between bursts: CDI relief → restored Ca²⁺ influx → facilitation
  • Frequency filtering: CDI acts as low-pass filter for presynaptic Ca²⁺ signals

CDI vs Other Inactivation Mechanisms

Three Types of VGCC Inactivation:

  1. Ca²⁺-dependent (CDI) - Fast, Ca²⁺-mediated (~50 ms)
  2. Voltage-dependent (VDI) - Slower, voltage-sensor mediated (~100-500 ms)
  3. G-protein mediated - Slower, neurotransmitter modulation (~100-1000 ms)

Presynaptic Dominance:

  • Calcium channels in presynapse: Primarily CaV2.1 (P/Q-type) and CaV2.2 (N-type)
  • CDI strength: CaV2.1 > CaV2.2
  • Location specificity: Active zone channels show strongest CDI

Modulation of CDI by other factors

BDNF Modulation:

text

BDNF → TrkB → PLCγ → DAG → PKC → phosphorylates VGCC
Result: ↓ CDI → prolonged Ca²⁺ influx → enhanced release

NO Modulation:

text

NO → sGC → cGMP → PKG → phosphorylates CaM or VGCC
Result: ↑ CDI → shorter Ca²⁺ influx → reduced release

eCB Modulation:

text

eCB → CB1 → Gβγ → binds VGCC directly
Result: Channel inhibition + ↑ CDI → strong suppression

ATP/Energy Status:

text

Low ATP → impaired Ca²⁺ pumps → elevated resting Ca²⁺
Result: CaM partially occupied → reduced CDI dynamic range