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Dive into the research topics where Serge Marty is active.

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Featured researches published by Serge Marty.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Three-Dimensional Architecture of Presynaptic Terminal Cytomatrix

Léa Siksou; Philippe Rostaing; Jean-Pierre Lechaire; Thomas Boudier; Toshihisa Ohtsuka; Anna Fejtova; Hung-Teh Kao; Paul Greengard; Eckart D. Gundelfinger; Antoine Triller; Serge Marty

Presynaptic terminals are specialized for mediating rapid fusion of synaptic vesicles (SVs) after calcium influx. The regulated trafficking of SVs likely results from a highly organized cytomatrix. How this cytomatrix links SVs, maintains them near the active zones (AZs) of release, and organizes docked SVs at the release sites is not fully understood. To analyze the three-dimensional (3D) architecture of the presynaptic cytomatrix, electron tomography of presynaptic terminals contacting spines was performed in the stratum radiatum of the rat hippocampal CA1 area. To preserve the cytomatrix, hippocampal slices were immobilized using high-pressure freezing, followed by cryosubstitution and embedding. SVs are surrounded by a dense network of filaments. A given vesicle is connected to ∼1.5 neighboring ones. SVs at the periphery of this network are also linked to the plasma membrane, by longer filaments. More of these filaments are found at the AZ. At the AZ, docked SVs are grouped around presynaptic densities. Filaments with adjacent SVs emerge from these densities. Immunogold localizations revealed that synapsin is located in the presynaptic bouton, whereas Bassoon and CAST (ERC2) are at focal points next to the AZ. In synapsin triple knock-out mice, the number of SVs is reduced by 63%, but the size of the boutons is reduced by only 18%, and the mean distance of SVs to the AZ is unchanged. This 3D analysis reveals the morphological constraints exerted by the presynaptic molecular scaffold. SVs are tightly interconnected in the axonal bouton, and this network is preferentially connected to the AZ.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Analysis of synaptic ultrastructure without fixative using high-pressure freezing and tomography

Philippe Rostaing; Eleonore Réal; Léa Siksou; Jean-Pierre Lechaire; Thomas Boudier; Tobias M. Boeckers; Frank B. Gertler; Eckart D. Gundelfinger; Antoine Triller; Serge Marty

Electron microscopy allows the analysis of synaptic ultrastructure and its modifications during learning or in pathological conditions. However, conventional electron microscopy uses aldehyde fixatives that alter the morphology of the synapse by changing osmolarity and collapsing its molecular components. We have used high‐pressure freezing (HPF) to capture within a few milliseconds structural features without aldehyde fixative, and thus to provide a snapshot of living synapses.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

A common molecular basis for membrane docking and functional priming of synaptic vesicles

Léa Siksou; Frederique Varoqueaux; Olivier Pascual; Antoine Triller; Nils Brose; Serge Marty

Soluble N‐ethylmaleimide‐sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes execute synaptic vesicle (SV) fusion. Vesicle fusion is preceded by an obligatory Munc13‐dependent priming process that conveys fusion competence to SVs by facilitating SNARE complex assembly. Ultrastructural studies after chemical fixation indicated that vesicle docking to the plasma membrane is independent of Munc13s but these results may be misleading because aldehyde fixatives modify the localization of SVs with respect to the plasma membrane. To reinvestigate the role of Munc13s in vesicle docking, cultured hippocampal slices were immobilized using high‐pressure freezing, which circumvents aldehyde artifacts. High‐pressure freezing was combined with electron tomography to reach a resolution that allows the characterization of details of SV docking in a close‐to‐native state. In control slices, docked vesicles are not hemifused with the plasma membrane but linked to it and to dense material at the active zone by small strands. In slice cultures from Munc13‐deficient mice, vesicles are not docked to the active zone plasma membrane. These results indicate that SV docking at the plasma membrane and functional priming are respective morphological and physiological manifestations of the same molecular process mediated by SNARE complexes and Munc13s.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2011

Ultrastructural organization of presynaptic terminals

Léa Siksou; Antoine Triller; Serge Marty

In response to calcium influx, synaptic vesicles fuse very rapidly with the plasma membrane to release their neurotransmitter content. An important mechanism for sustained release includes the formation of new vesicles by local endocytosis. How synaptic vesicles are trafficked from the sites of endocytosis to the sites of release and how they are maintained at the release sites remain poorly understood. Recent studies using fast freezing immobilization and electron tomography have led to insights on the ultrastructural organization of presynaptic boutons and how these structural elements may maintain synaptic vesicles and organize their exocytosis at particular areas of the plasma membrane.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Quantitative effects produced by modifications of neuronal activity on the size of GABAA receptor clusters in hippocampal slice cultures

Serge Marty; Rosine Wehrle; Jean-Marc Fritschy; Constantino Sotelo

The number and strength of GABAergic synapses needs to be precisely adjusted for adequate control of excitatory activity. We investigated to what extent the size of GABAA receptor clusters at inhibitory synapses is under the regulation of neuronal activity. Slices from P7 rat hippocampus were cultured for 13 days in the presence of bicuculline or 4‐aminopyridine (4‐AP) to increase neuronal activity, or DNQX to decrease activity. The changes provoked by these treatments on clusters immunoreactive for the α1 and α2 subunits of the GABAA receptor or gephyrin were quantitatively evaluated. While an increase in activity augmented the density of these clusters, a decrease in activity provoked, in contrast, a decrease in their density. An inverse regulation was observed for the size of individual clusters. Bicuculline and 4‐AP decreased whilst DNQX increased the mean size of the clusters. When the pharmacological treatments were applied for 2 days instead of 2 weeks, no effects on the size of the clusters were observed. The variations in the mean size of individual clusters were mainly due to changes in the number of small clusters. Finally, a regulation of the size of GABAA receptor clusters occurred during development in vivo, with a decrease of the mean size of the clusters between P7 and P21. This physiological change was also the result of an increase in the number of small clusters. These results indicate that neuronal activity regulates the mean size of GABAA receptor‐ and gephyrin‐immunoreactive clusters by modifying specifically the number of synapses with small clusters of receptors.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2009

An emerging view of presynaptic structure from electron microscopic studies

Léa Siksou; Antoine Triller; Serge Marty

In response to calcium influx, some of the synaptic vesicles in presynaptic terminals fuse rapidly with the presynaptic membrane, allowing fast synaptic transmission. The regulated recycling of synaptic vesicles at the terminals is required for a sustained release of neurotransmitters. Localization of ‘ready to be released’ vesicles in close vicinities to voltage‐gated calcium channels enables the rapid release of neurotransmitters. Thus, recycling vesicles must translocate from the sites of endocytosis to these release sites. However, the sub‐cellular organization that supports this local vesicular traffic remains poorly understood. We will review the results of various electron microscopy studies, which have begun to unveil the structure of presynaptic terminals.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Mature Purkinje Cells Require the Retinoic Acid-Related Orphan Receptor-α (RORα) to Maintain Climbing Fiber Mono-Innervation and Other Adult Characteristics

Chen Xr; Heck N; Ann M. Lohof; Christelle Rochefort; Morel Mp; Wehrlé R; Mohamed Doulazmi; Serge Marty; Cannaya; Avci Hx; Jean Mariani; Laure Rondi-Reig; Guilan Vodjdani; Rachel M. Sherrard; Sotelo C; Isabelle Dusart

Neuronal maturation during development is a multistep process regulated by transcription factors. The transcription factor RORα (retinoic acid-related orphan receptor α) is necessary for early Purkinje cell (PC) maturation but is also expressed throughout adulthood. To identify the role of RORα in mature PCs, we used Cre-lox mouse genetic tools in vivo that delete it specifically from PCs between postnatal days 10–21. Up to 14 d of age, differences between mutant and control PCs were not detectable: both were mono-innervated by climbing fibers (CFs) extending along their well-developed dendrites with spiny branchlets. By week 4, mutant mice were ataxic, some PCs had died, and remaining PC soma and dendrites were atrophic, with almost complete disappearance of spiny branchlets. The innervation pattern of surviving RORα-deleted PCs was abnormal with several immature characteristics. Notably, multiple functional CF innervation was reestablished on these mature PCs, simultaneously with the relocation of CF contacts to the PC soma and their stem dendrite. This morphological modification of CF contacts could be induced even later, using lentivirus-mediated depletion of rora from adult PCs. These data show that the late postnatal expression of RORα cell-autonomously regulates the maintenance of PC dendritic complexity, and the CF innervation status of the PC (dendritic vs somatic contacts, and mono-innervation vs multi-innervation). Thus, the differentiation state of adult neurons is under the control of transcription factors; and in their absence, adult neurons lose their mature characteristics and acquire some characteristics of an earlier developmental stage.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

A role for vesicular glutamate transporter 1 in synaptic vesicle clustering and mobility

Léa Siksou; Kätlin Silm; Christoph Biesemann; Ralf B. Nehring; Sonja M. Wojcik; Antoine Triller; Salah El Mestikawy; Serge Marty; Etienne Herzog

Synaptic vesicles (SVs) from excitatory synapses carry vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) that fill the vesicles with neurotransmitter. Although the essential function of VGLUTs as glutamate transporters has been well established, the evidence for additional cell‐biological functions is more controversial. Both VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 disruptions in mice result in a reduced number of SVs away from release sites, flattening of SVs, and the appearance of tubular structures. Therefore, we analysed the morphology, biochemical composition and trafficking of SVs at synapses of VGLUT1−/− mice in order to test for a function of VGLUTs in the formation or clustering of SVs. Analyses with high‐pressure freezing immobilisation and electron tomography pointed to a role of VGLUT1 transport function in the tonicity of excitatory SVs, explaining the aldehyde‐induced flattening of SVs observed in VGLUT1−/− synapses. We confirmed the steep reduction in the number of SVs previously observed in VGLUT1−/− presynaptic terminals, but did not observe accumulation of endocytotic intermediates. Furthermore, SV proteins of adult VGLUT1−/− mouse brain tissue were expressed at normal levels in all subcellular fractions, suggesting that they were not displaced to another organelle. We thus assessed the mobility of the recently documented superpool of SVs. Synaptobrevin2–enhanced green fluorescent protein time lapse experiments revealed an oversized superpool of SVs in VGLUT1−/− neurons. Our results support the idea that, beyond glutamate loading, VGLUT1 enhances the tonicity of excitatory SVs and stabilises SVs at presynaptic terminals.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Adaptive and non-adaptive changes in activity-deprived presynaptic terminals.

Süzel Horellou; Olivier Pascual; Antoine Triller; Serge Marty

How the number of docked vesicles is regulated is still unclear. Following chronic activity blockade the number of docked vesicles increases, providing a model through which to address this issue. We tested the hypotheses that the number of docked vesicles is regulated with the size of the terminal, and by the level of Rab3‐interacting molecule 1/2 (RIM1/2). We immobilized mouse hippocampal slice cultures by high‐pressure freezing after 3 days of tetrodotoxin treatment and analysed them by electron microscopy. The number of docked vesicles, the size of the active zones and the amount of GluA2 were increased after activity blockade. However, there was no modification of either the total number of synaptic vesicles or the area of presynaptic profiles. Surprisingly, immunocytochemistry showed no change in the mean level of RIM1/2 per terminal but its distribution was modified. Additionally, there was no modification of the mean frequency or amplitude of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents, but the distribution of amplitudes was modified. These results indicate a specific homeostatic regulation of the synaptic junction. The number of docked vesicles does not seem to be regulated by the amount of RIM1/2. The modification of the distribution, but not the amount, of RIM1/2 may explain the contradiction between the morphological and electrophysiological findings.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2000

Neuronal Activity and Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Regulate the Density of Inhibitory Synapses in Organotypic Slice Cultures of Postnatal Hippocampus

Serge Marty; Rosine Wehrlé; Constantino Sotelo

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Antoine Triller

École Normale Supérieure

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Léa Siksou

École Normale Supérieure

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Olivier Pascual

École Normale Supérieure

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Philippe Rostaing

École Normale Supérieure

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Eckart D. Gundelfinger

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Constantino Sotelo

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Eleonore Réal

École Normale Supérieure

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