Nerve growth factors, substrate and cell adhesion molecules, and protein synthesis are considered necessary for most developmental programs, including cell proliferation, migration, differentiation, axogenesis, pathfinding, and synaptic plasticity. Their direct involvement in synapse formation, however, has not yet been fully determined. The neurite outgrowth that precedes synaptogenesis is contingent on protein synthesis, the availability of externally supplied growth factors, and substrate adhesion molecules. It is therefore difficult to ascertain whether these factors are also needed for synapse formation. To examine this issue directly we reconstructed synapses between the cell somata of identified Lymnaea neurons. We show that when paired in the presence of brain conditioned medium (CM), mutual inhibitory chemical synapses between neurons right pedal dorsal 1 (RPeD1) and visceral dorsal 4 (VD4) formed in a soma-soma configuration (86%; n ϭ 50). These synapses were reliable and target cell specific and were similar to those seen in the intact brain. To test whether synapse formation between RPeD1 and VD4 required de novo protein synthesis, the cells were paired in the presence of anisomycin (a nonspecific protein synthesis blocker). Chronic anisomycin treatment (18 hr) after cell pairing completely blocked synaptogenesis between RPeD1 and VD4 (n ϭ 24); however, it did not affect neuronal excitability or responsiveness to exogenously applied transmitters (n ϭ 7), nor did chronic anisomycin treatment affect synaptic transmission between pairs of cells that had formed synapses (n ϭ 5). To test the growth and substrate dependence of synapse formation, RPeD1 and VD4 were paired in the absence of CM [defined medium; (n ϭ 22)] on either plain plastic culture dishes (n ϭ 10) or glass coverslips (n ϭ 10). Neither CM nor any exogenous substrate was required for synapse formation. In summary, our data provide direct evidence that synaptogenesis in this system requires specific, cell contact-induced, de novo protein synthesis but does not depend on extrinsic growth factors or substrate adhesion molecules.Key words: synapse formation; in vitro; growth factors; Lymnaea; soma-soma synapses; mollusks To f unction properly, the adult brain relies heavily on neuronal connectivity patterns that are orchestrated during early embryonic development (McMahan, 1990;Nelson et al., 1990;Goodman and Shatz, 1993;Hall and Sanes, 1993; Jessel and Kandel, 1993;Goodman, 1994Goodman, , 1996Grantyn et al., 1995;Katz and Shatz, 1996;Wu et al., 1996;Spencer et al., 1997). Yet, the cellular and molecular mechanisms (intrinsic and /or extrinsic) that determine the specificity of synaptic connections in the nervous system remain poorly understood. This gap in our f undamental knowledge regarding nervous system development (and also regeneration) owes its existence to the complexity of the mammalian brain: synapse formation between defined pre-and postsynaptic neurons can be studied only rarely in the intact nervous system. Various in vivo and in...