Abstract
THE potential importance of intracellular calcium-binding proteins in rapid and highly localized Ca2+ signalling is poorly understood. During fast synaptic transmission, which occurs at specialized active zones where Ca2+ diffuses only a few tens of nanometres from channels to neurotransmitter release sites1, a cytoplasmic Ca2+ buffer would have to be extremely fast or present in millimolar concentrations to intercept a significant fraction of the calcium ions en route to their targets2–5. Therefore, Ca2+ buffers have been presumed to be unimportant in fast exocytosis1,6,7 and another fast calcium-mediated process, electrical resonance in hair cells4,8. Here I present evidence to the contrary by showing that hair cells in the frog sacculus contain millimolar concentrations of a mobile cytoplasmic calcium buffer that captures Ca2+ within a few microseconds after it enters through presynaptic Ca2+ channels and carries it away from the point of entry. This spatial buffering reduces the presynaptic free Ca2+ by up to 60 per cent and probably restricts the region in which the internal calcium ion concentration exceeds 1 μM to within <250 nm of each synaptic site. The buffer can thus influence both electrical resonance and synaptic transmission. Calbindin-D28K or a related protein may serve as the mobile calcium buffer, an action similar to its function in transporting Ca2+ across intestinal epithelial cells.