Abstract
In cultured Lymnaea stagnalis neurons, osmolarity increases (upshocks) rapidly elicited large membranous dilations that could be dislodged and pushed around inside the cell with a microprobe. Subsequent osmolarity decreases (downshocks) caused these vacuole-like dilations (VLDs) to disappear. Additional upshock/downshock perturbations resulted in repeated appearance/disappearance (formation/reversal) of VLDs at discrete sites. Confocal microscopy indicated that VLDs formed as invaginations of the substrate-adherent surface of the neuron: extracellular rhodamine-dextran entered VLDs as they formed and was expelled during reversal. Our standard VLD-inducing perturbation was: 2–4 min downshock to distilled water, upshock to normal saline. However, a wide range of other osmotic perturbations (involving osmolarities up to 3.5x normal, perturbations with or without Ca2+, replacement of ions by sucrose) were also used. We concluded that mechanical, not chemical, aspects of the osmo-mechanical shocks drove the VLD formation and reversal dynamics and that extracellular Ca2+ was not required.
Following a standard perturbation, VLDs grew from invisible to their full diameter (>10 μm) in just over a minute. Over the next 0.5–3 hr in normal saline, neurons recovered. Recovery eliminated any visible VLDs and was accompanied by cytoplasmic turmoil around the VLDs. Recovery was prevented by cytochalasin B, brefeldin A and N-ethylmaleimide but not by nocodazole. In striking contrast, these drugs did not prevent repeated VLD formation and reversal in response to standard osmo-mechanical perturbations; VLD disappearance during reversal and during recovery are different.
The osmo-mechanical changes that elicited VLDs may, in an exaggerated fashion, mimic tension changes in extending and retracting neuntes. In this context we postulate: (a) the trafficking or disposition of membrane between internal stores and plasma membrane is mechano sensitive, (b) normally, this mechanosensitivity provides an “on demand” system by which neurons can accommodate stretch/release perturbations and control cell shape but, (c) given sudden extreme mechanical stimuli, it yields VLDs.
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Present address: Biology Department, Washington University, St Louis, MO 63130-4899
This work was supported by NSERC of Canada research grants to CEM and to LRM. CR was the recipient of a postdoctoral fellowship from the Ministere francais de la Recherche et de l'Espace. We thank J-M. Trifaro for the use of his image processing equipment.
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Reuzeau, C., Mills, L.R., Harris, J.A. et al. Discrete and reversible vacuole-like dilations induced by osmomechanical perturbation of neurons. J. Membarin Biol. 145, 33–47 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00233305
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00233305