%0 Journal Article %T Developmental Tightening of Cerebellar Cortical Synaptic Influx-Release Coupling %A Akos Kulik %A Daniel Althof %A David Baur %A Grit Bornschein %A Hartmut Schmidt %A Jens Eilers %A Masahiko Watanabe %J The Journal of Neurosience %D 2015 %R 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2900-14.2015 %X Tight coupling between Ca2+ channels and the sensor for vesicular transmitter release at the presynaptic active zone (AZ) is crucial for high-fidelity synaptic transmission. It has been hypothesized that a switch from a loosely coupled to a tightly coupled transmission mode is a common step in the maturation of CNS synapses. However, this hypothesis has never been tested at cortical synapses. We addressed this hypothesis at a representative small cortical synapse: the synapse connecting mouse cerebellar cortical parallel fibers to Purkinje neurons. We found that the slow Ca2+ chelator EGTA affected release significantly stronger at immature than at mature synapses, while the fast chelator BAPTA was similarly effective in both groups. Analysis of paired-pulse ratios and quantification of release probability ( pr ) with multiple-probability fluctuation analysis revealed increased facilitation at immature synapses accompanied by reduced pr . Cav2.1 Ca2+ channel immunoreactivity, assessed by quantitative high-resolution immuno-electron microscopy, was scattered over immature boutons but confined to putative AZs at mature boutons. Presynaptic Ca2+ signals were quantified with two-photon microscopy and found to be similar between maturation stages. Models adjusted to fit EGTA dose¨Cresponse curves as well as differential effects of the Ca2+ channel blocker Cd2+ indicate looser and less homogenous coupling at immature terminals compared with mature ones. These results demonstrate functionally relevant developmental tightening of influx-release coupling at a single AZ cortical synapse and corroborate developmental tightening of coupling as a prevalent phenomenon in the mammalian brain %U http://www.jneurosci.org/content/35/5/1858