Literature DB >> 20457864

Retinal synaptic pathways underlying the response of the rabbit local edge detector.

Thomas L Russell1, Frank S Werblin.   

Abstract

We studied the circuitry that underlies the behavior of the local edge detector (LED) retinal ganglion cell in rabbit by measuring the spatial and temporal properties of excitatory and inhibitory currents under whole cell voltage clamp. Previous work showed that LED excitation is suppressed by activity in the surround. However, the contributions of outer and inner retina to this characteristic and the neurotransmitters used are currently unknown. Blockage of retinal inhibitory pathways (GABA(A), GABA(C), and glycine) eliminated edge selectivity. Inverting gratings in the surround with 50-microm stripe sizes did not stimulate horizontal cells, but suppressed on and off excitation by roughly 60%, indicating inhibition of bipolar terminals (feedback inhibition). On pharmacologic blockage, we showed that feedback inhibition used both GABA(A) and GABA(C) receptors, but not glycine. Glycinergic inhibition suppressed GABAergic feedback inhibition in the center, enabling larger excitatory currents in response to luminance changes. Excitation, feedback inhibition, and direct (feedforward) inhibition responded to luminance-neutral flipping gratings of 20- to 50-microm widths, showing they are driven by independent subunits within their receptive fields, which confers sensitivity to borders between areas of texture and nontexture. Feedforward inhibition was glycinergic, its rise time was faster than decay time, and did not function to delay spiking at the onset of a stimulus. Both the on and off phases could be triggered by luminance shifts as short in duration as 33 ms and could be triggered during scenes that already produced a high baseline level of feedforward inhibition. Our results show how LED circuitry can use subreceptive field sensitivity to detect visual edges via the interaction between excitation and feedback inhibition and also respond to rapid luminance shifts within a rapidly changing scene by producing feedforward inhibition.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20457864      PMCID: PMC2867570          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00987.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  48 in total

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Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  1992-07-01       Impact factor: 3.215

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Journal:  Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  1980-02-29

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Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1980-05       Impact factor: 5.182

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Authors:  N Vardi; P Sterling
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9.  Light adaptation alters inner retinal inhibition to shape OFF retinal pathway signaling.

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10.  Diverse visual features encoded in mouse lateral geniculate nucleus.

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