4.8 Article

Spatiotemporally Asymmetric Excitation Supports Mammalian Retinal Motion Sensitivity

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 19, Pages 3277-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.08.048

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Lundbeck Foundation [DANDRITE-R248-2016-2518]
  2. Research Council Starting Grant (CIRCUITASSEMBLY) [638730]
  3. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF15OC0017252]
  4. Carlsberg Foundation [CF17-008]

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The detection of visual motion is a fundamental function of the visual system. How motion speed and direction are computed together at the cellular level, however, remains largely unknown. Here, we suggest a circuit mechanism by which excitatory inputs to direction-selective ganglion cells in the mouse retina become sensitive to the motion speed and direction of image motion. Electrophysiological, imaging, and connectomic analyses provide evidence that the dendrites of ON direction-selective cells receive spatially offset and asymmetrically filtered glutamatergic inputs along motion-preference axis from asymmetrically wired bipolar and amacrine cell types with distinct release dynamics. A computational model shows that, with this spatiotemporal structure, the input amplitude becomes sensitive to speed and direction by a preferred direction enhancement mechanism. Our results highlight the role of an excitatory mechanism in retinal motion computation by which feature selectivity emerges from non-selective inputs.

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