Neuromuscular junction
[BJA CEPD Reviews 2002 Vol 2(5) "Physiology of neuromuscular junction"]
Presynpatic neuron
Motor neuron
- Cell bodies are in ventral horn of the spinal cord
- Myelinated
Motor unit
- A muscle cell has only one neuromuscular junction, and only innervated by one nerve
- A nerve, and the group of muscle cells that it innervates comprise a motor unit
Prejunctional nicotinic ACh receptors
- Prejunctional nAChRs influence the release of acetylcholine
- Differ from postjunctional nAChRs in
* Chemical binding characteristics
* The nature of ion channel they control (some are Ca2+ channels, some are Na+ channels)
* Preferential blockade during high-frequency stimulation
Acetylcholine storage
- ACh are stored in the vesicles in the axon terminal
- 1% of the vesicles are available for immediate release
- About 80% of the ACh are in reserve pool
* Released in response to nerve impulses
- The remainder is the stationary store
- Each vesicle contains about 12,000 molecules of ACh
* Or 5,000 - 10,000 molecules [SH4:p214]
- ACh is loaded into the vesicles by a magnesium-dependent proton pump ATPase
Postsynaptic muscle cell
Motor end plate
- A small specialised area on the muscle cell
- Very rich in ACh receptors (10,000-20,000 per square micrometer)
- 1-10 million receptor per end plate
Extrajunctional receptors
- Extrajunctional receptors differ from junctional receptors
- Extrajunctional receptors increase in number when there is deficient stimulation of the skeletal muscle
* e.g. after denervation injury, burn, or CVA
* Not found in normal active muscles
- Extrajunctional receptors has shorter halflife (<24 hours)
* c.f. Normal junctional ACh receptors is about 14 days
- Extrajunctional receptors are highly sensitive to ACh and suxamethonium
--> Open for longer
* But ion conductance is smaller
- Extrajunctional receptors tend to be concentrated around the end plates, but can also be found anywhere on the (postjunctional) muscle membrane
- Similar pentameric structure with 5 subunits, but have the foetal delta subunit increased of the normal adult epsilon subunit
Clinical relevance
Where there is a large number of extrajunctional receptors
- Resistance to non-depolarising muscle relaxants
- Increased sensitivity to depolarising muscle relaxants
--> Hyperkalaemic response can be exaggerated
Physiological events
Release of ACh
- Nerve impulse reach nerve terminal
--> Type P Ca2+ channel in the terminal membrane opens
--> Ca2+ flows into the nerve terminal
--> Release of contents of 50-100 vesicles, and the reserve vesicles is moved to the release sites (active zones)
- ACh diffuses into the synaptic (or junctional) cleft
--> Binds to nicotinic ACh receptors on the post-junctional membrane
--> Conformational change in the receptors
--> Cations (Na+, K+, Ca2+) are able to pass through the channel (ligand-gated channel)
--> Depolarisation
- When the threshold of -50mV is reached
--> Voltage-gated Na+ channel on the sarcolemma open
--> Inflow of Na+ into muscle cell
--> Action potential
- ACh not bound to a receptor, or dissociates from the receptors
--> Quickly broken down by acetylcholinesterase
NB:
- Only 6-25% of the ACh released normally is needed to reach the threshold potential, and thus causing AP
- Release of vesicles is Ca2+ dependent
- Movement of ACh from synthesis sites to release sites is Na+ dependent