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Synaptic Transmission

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mechanism2440 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Synaptic Transmission

Overview

Synaptic transmission is the fundamental process by which neurons communicate, converting electrical signals (action potentials) into chemical signals (neurotransmitter release) across the 20–40 nm synaptic cleft. The human brain contains approximately 100 trillion synapses, each capable of transmitting signals within 0.5–5 milliseconds with extraordinary fidelity and plasticity. In neurodegenerative diseases, synaptic dysfunction is increasingly recognized as the earliest pathological event — preceding neuronal death by years to decades — and correlating more strongly with cognitive decline than either amyloid plaques or neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer's disease[@terry1991].

Presynaptic Mechanisms

The Synaptic Vesicle Cycle

Neurotransmitter release requires the precisely orchestrated cycling of synaptic vesicles through distinct functional pools[@sudhof2012]:

Vesicle pools: The reserve pool (RP, ~80% of vesicles) is tethered to the actin cytoskeleton via synapsin and mobilized during sustained activity. The recycling pool (~15%) maintains transmission during moderate activity. The readily releasable pool (RRP, ~5%, 5–20 vesicles per active zone) is docked and primed at the active zone for immediate release upon calcium entry.

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