Literature DB >> 16630836

Failure to maintain eye-specific segregation in nob, a mutant with abnormally patterned retinal activity.

Jay Demas1, Botir T Sagdullaev, Erick Green, Lisa Jaubert-Miazza, Maureen A McCall, Ronald G Gregg, Rachel O L Wong, William Guido.   

Abstract

Axon terminals from the two eyes initially overlap in the dorsal-lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) but subsequently refine to occupy nonoverlapping territories. Retinal activity is required to establish and maintain this segregation. We show that despite the presence of retinal activity, segregated projections desegregate when the structure of activity is altered. Early in development, spontaneous retinal activity in the no b-wave (nob) mouse is indistinguishable from that of wild-type mice, and eye-specific segregation proceeds normally. But, around eye-opening, spontaneous and visually evoked activity in nob retinas become abnormal, coincident with a failure to preserve precise eye-specific territories. Dark-rearing studies suggest that altered visual experience is not responsible. Transgenic rescue of the mutated protein (nyctalopin) within nob retinal interneurons, without rescuing expression in either retinal projection neurons or their postsynaptic targets in the dLGN, restores spontaneous retinal activity patterns and prevents desegregation. Thus, normally structured spontaneous retinal activity stabilizes newly refined retinogeniculate circuitry.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16630836     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2006.03.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuron        ISSN: 0896-6273            Impact factor:   17.173


  68 in total

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7.  Detecting pairwise correlations in spike trains: an objective comparison of methods and application to the study of retinal waves.

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9.  LTD and LTP at the developing retinogeniculate synapse.

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Authors:  Marla B Feller
Journal:  Neural Dev       Date:  2009-07-06       Impact factor: 3.842

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