Presynaptic Release Model: Sequence of Events & Multi-Timescale Modulations
CORE RELEASE SEQUENCE (Milliseconds)
Event 1: Action Potential Arrival
Event 2: VGCC Opening
Event 3: Ca²⁺ Influx & Microdomain Formation
Event 4: Vesicle Release Decision
Event 5: Ca²⁺ Clearance
Event 6: Vesicle Recycling
MODULATION MATRIX ACROSS TIMESCALES
MODULATION LEVEL 1: MILLISECONDS (Immediate Signal Processing)
| Event |
Modulator |
Effect |
Mechanism |
Timescale |
| VGCC Opening |
Voltage waveform |
AP width/duration affects open time |
K⁺ channel activation shapes repolarization |
During AP (1 ms) |
| VGCC Opening |
Ca²⁺-dependent inactivation (CDI) |
Auto-inhibition |
Ca²⁺ binding to calmodulin on VGCC |
5-50 ms |
| Ca²⁺ Microdomain |
Endogenous buffers |
Shapes [Ca²⁺] spatial/temporal profile |
Calbindin, parvalbumin binding |
<1 ms |
| Release Decision |
Synaptotagmin isoforms |
Different Ca²⁺ sensitivity |
Cooperative binding sites vary |
During Ca²⁺ binding |
| Release Decision |
SNARE complex state |
Priming level determines speed |
Munc13 activity, NSF disassembly |
<1 ms |
| Ca²⁺ Clearance |
Fast buffers |
Immediate Ca²⁺ binding |
High-affinity Ca²⁺ binding proteins |
<1 ms |
MODULATION LEVEL 2: TENS-HUNDREDS OF MILLISECONDS (Short-term Plasticity)
| Event |
Modulator |
Effect |
Mechanism |
Timescale |
| VGCC Opening |
Residual Ca²⁺ |
Ca²⁺-dependent facilitation |
Ca²⁺/CaM binding to VGCC β-subunit |
10-1000 ms |
| VGCC Opening |
eCB (CB1 activation) |
Direct inhibition |
Gβγ subunit blocks pore |
100-2000 ms |
| Ca²⁺ Microdomain |
Mitochondrial uptake |
Buffer capacity changes |
Uniporter activity with Ca²⁺ buildup |
10-1000 ms |
| RRP Replenishment |
Residual Ca²⁺ |
Enhanced mobilization |
Calcineurin activation → synapsin dephosphorylation |
10-1000 ms |
| RRP Replenishment |
ATP availability |
Limits priming rate |
NSF, v-ATPase, priming ATPases |
Continuous |
| Release Probability |
mGluR autoreceptors |
Activity-dependent inhibition |
Gi/o → ↓cAMP → ↓PKA → ↓VGCC |
50-500 ms |
| Ca²⁺ Clearance |
PMCA/NCX pumps |
Activity-dependent saturation |
Limited pump capacity during high frequency |
10-1000 ms |
| Vesicle Recycling |
Activity level |
Different endocytosis modes |
High activity → bulk endocytosis |
100 ms - 10 s |
MODULATION LEVEL 3: SECONDS-MINUTES (Metabolic & Signaling)
| Event |
Modulator |
Effect |
Mechanism |
Timescale |
| VGCC Density |
Surface expression |
More/fewer channels |
Phosphorylation-dependent trafficking |
30 s - 5 min |
| VGCC Function |
Kinase phosphorylation |
Changed open probability |
PKA, PKC, CaMKII phosphorylation |
1-10 min |
| Ca²⁺ Dynamics |
NO (cGMP pathway) |
Altered pump activity |
PKG phosphorylation of PMCA |
1-10 min |
| Vesicle Pools |
Mobilization rate |
RP→RRP speed changes |
Synapsin phosphorylation state |
1-10 min |
| ATP Production |
Lactate shuttle |
Enhanced ATP supply |
Astrocyte-neuron metabolic coupling |
1-10 min |
| Release Machinery |
BDNF (acute) |
Enhanced priming & docking |
TrkB → PLCγ → PKC activation |
1-10 min |
| Autoreceptor |
mGluR desensitization |
Reduced autoinhibition |
β-arrestin recruitment, internalization |
1-10 min |
| CB1 Receptor |
eCB-induced desensitization |
Reduced inhibition |
GRK phosphorylation, internalization |
1-10 min |
| Ca²⁺ Clearance |
Mitochondrial adaptation |
Increased capacity |
Matrix Ca²⁺ activates dehydrogenases |
1-10 min |
MODULATION LEVEL 4: MINUTES-HOURS (Structural & Transcriptional)
| Event |
Modulator |
Effect |
Mechanism |
Timescale |
| VGCC Expression |
BDNF (chronic) |
Increased channel synthesis |
TrkB → MAPK → CREB → gene expression |
30 min - 6 hr |
| VGCC Expression |
Activity-dependent |
Homeostatic scaling |
Ca²⁺ → NFAT/CREB → VGCC genes |
1-24 hr |
| Active Zone Size |
BDNF, activity |
More release sites |
Structural proteins (RIM, Bassoon) synthesis |
1-12 hr |
| Vesicle Pool Size |
BDNF, activity |
Larger RP/RRP |
Synaptic vesicle protein synthesis |
1-12 hr |
| SNARE Machinery |
Local translation |
More fusion complexes |
mTOR-dependent protein synthesis |
30 min - 3 hr |
| Mitochondrial Density |
BDNF, activity |
Increased ATP capacity |
PGC-1α activation → biogenesis |
3-24 hr |
| Metabolic Pathways |
Activity patterns |
Enhanced glycolysis/oxidation |
HIF-1α, AMPK pathway activation |
1-6 hr |
| Receptor Expression |
Chronic modulation |
mGluR, CB1 level changes |
Transcriptional regulation |
3-12 hr |
| Buffer Expression |
Ca²⁺ history |
Calbindin/parvalbumin levels |
Ca²⁺-dependent gene regulation |
3-12 hr |
MODULATION LEVEL 5: HOURS-DAYS (Metaplasticity & Structural Remodeling)
| Event |
Modulator |
Effect |
Mechanism |
Timescale |
| Synapse Size |
Chronic activity |
Growth/shrinkage |
Cytoskeletal reorganization |
6-48 hr |
| VGCC Distribution |
Activity patterns |
Clustering changes |
Scaffold protein (Homer, Shank) expression |
12-72 hr |
| Release Site Organization |
BDNF, activity |
Active zone architecture |
Piccolo, Bassoon, RIM expression |
12-72 hr |
| Vesicle Recycling |
Chronic patterns |
Efficiency changes |
Endocytosis machinery expression |
12-48 hr |
| Metaplasticity Rules |
Activity history |
Altered LTP/LTD thresholds |
Kinase/phosphatase expression changes |
24-72 hr |
| Energy Allocation |
Chronic demand |
Mitochondrial positioning |
Motor protein (kinesin, dynein) adaptation |
12-48 hr |
| Network Integration |
System-level activity |
Presynaptic inhibition/facilitation |
Interneuron connectivity changes |
24-96 hr |
MODULATION CASCADES (How Signals Propagate Through Events)
Example 1: High-Frequency Activity Cascade
Example 2: BDNF-Mediated Potentiation Cascade
Example 3: eCB-Mediated Depression Cascade
CROSS-EVENT MODULATION PATTERNS
Feedforward Loops:
Feedback Loops:
Energy Management Loops:
INTEGRATED TIMELINE OF A RELEASE EVENT WITH MODULATIONS
t = 0-1 ms (AP to Release)
t = 1-100 ms (Immediate Aftermath)
t = 100 ms - 1 min (Short-term Adaptation)
t = 1 min - 1 hr (Medium-term Plasticity)
t = 1 hr - days (Long-term Restructuring)
MODELING PRINCIPLES
- Hierarchical Modulation: Faster events constrain slower adaptations
- Bidirectional Coupling: Every modulation affects and is affected by release events
- Energy Constraints: ATP availability gates all processes
- History Dependence: Past activity patterns determine current modulation states
- Context Specificity: Same modulator can have opposite effects depending on timing/context
- Redundancy: Multiple pathways can achieve similar outcomes
- Trade-offs: Every enhancement has costs (energy, stability, flexibility)
This model shows how a simple millisecond release event sits at the center of a rich, multi-timescale regulatory network where each release both responds to and influences modulations across seconds to days, creating a dynamic, self-tuning system for synaptic transmission.