4.4 Article

Genetic Dissection of Rod and Cone Pathways in the Dark-Adapted Mouse Retina

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 3, Pages 1945-1955

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00142.2009

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Eye Institute (NEI) [EY-04446, EY-014127, EY-012008, EY-06671, EY-02520]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Services [GM-37751]
  3. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [HD-04260]
  4. Retina Research Foundation (Houston)
  5. International Retinal Research Foundation
  6. Foundation Fighting Blindness and Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc.

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Abd-El-Barr MM, Pennesi ME, Saszik SM, Barrow AJ, Lem J, Bramblett DE, Paul DL, Frishman LJ, Wu SM. Genetic dissection of rod and cone pathways in the dark-adapted mouse retina. J Neurophysiol 102: 1945-1955, 2009. First published July 8, 2009; doi:10.1152/jn.00142.2009. A monumental task of the mammalian retina is to encode an enormous range (> 10(9)-fold) of light intensities experienced by the animal in natural environments. Retinal neurons carry out this task by dividing labor into many parallel rod and cone synaptic pathways. Here we study the operational plan of various rod- and cone-mediated pathways by analyzing electroretinograms (ERGs), primarily b-wave responses, in dark-adapted wildtype, connexin36 knockout, depolarizing rod-bipolar cell (DBCR) knockout, and rod transducin alpha-subunit knockout mice [WT, Cx36(-/-), Bhlhb4(-/-),and Tr-alpha(-/-)]. To provide additional insight into the cellular origins of various components of the ERG, we compared dark-adapted ERG responses with response dynamic ranges of individual retinal cells recorded with patch electrodes from dark-adapted mouse retinas published from other studies. Our results suggest that the connexin36-mediated rod-cone coupling is weak when light stimulation is weak and becomes stronger as light stimulation increases in strength and that rod signals may be transmitted to some DBC(C)s via direct chemical synapses. Moreover, our analysis indicates that DBCR responses contribute about 80% of the overall DBC response to scotopic light and that rod and cone signals contribute almost equally to the overall DBC responses when stimuli are strong enough to saturate the rod bipolar cell response. Furthermore, our study demonstrates that analysis of ERG b-wave of dark-adapted, pathway-specific mutants can be used as an in vivo tool for dissecting rod and cone synaptic pathways and for studying the functions of pathway-specific gene products in the retina.

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