4.6 Article

Interactions of cone cannabinoid CB1 and dopamine D4 receptors increase day/night difference in rod-cone gap junction coupling in goldfish retina

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 599, Issue 17, Pages 4085-4100

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP281308

Keywords

cannabinoid CB1 receptor; circadian rhythm; cone photoreceptor cell; dopamine D-4 receptor; electrical synapse; gap junction; rod photoreceptor cell

Funding

  1. NIH [EY029777]
  2. Plum Foundation (Studio City, CA)

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Cannabinoid CB1 receptors and dopamine D-4 receptors work together in the retina to enhance the day/night difference in rod-cone gap junction communication, improving night vision and enhancing detection of spatial details during the day. This synergistic interaction between the receptors increases the detection of very dim large objects at night and fine spatial details in the day.
Key points Although cone and rod photoreceptor cells in the retina have a type of cannabinoid receptor called a CB1 receptor, little is known about how cannabinoids, the active component in marijuana, affect retinal function. Studies have shown that a circadian (24-h) clock in the retina uses dopamine receptors, which are also on photoreceptors, to regulate gap junctions (a type of cell-to-cell communication) between rods and cones, so that they are functional (open) at night but closed in the day. We show that CB1 receptors have opposite effects on rod-cone gap junctions in day and night, decreasing communication in the day when dopamine receptors are active and increasing communication when dopamine receptors are inactive. CB1 and dopamine receptors thus work together to enhance the day/night difference in rod-cone gap junction communication. The increased rod-cone communication at night due to cannabinoid CB1 receptors may help improve night vision. Cannabinoid CB1 receptors and dopamine D-4 receptors in the brain form receptor complexes that interact but the physiological function of these interactions in intact tissue remains unclear. In vertebrate retina, rods and cones, which are connected by gap junctions, express both CB1 and D-4 receptors. Because the retinal circadian clock uses cone D-4 receptors to decrease rod-cone gap junction coupling in the day and to increase it at night, we studied whether an interaction between cone CB1 and D-4 receptors increases the day/night difference in rod-cone coupling compared to D-4 receptors acting alone. Using electrical recording and injections of Neurobiotin tracer into individual cones in intact goldfish retinas, we found that SR141716A (a CB1 receptor antagonist) application alone in the day increased both the extent of rod-cone tracer coupling and rod input to cones, which reaches cones via open gap junctions. Conversely, SR141716A application alone at night or SR141716A application in the day following 30-min spiperone (a D-4 receptor antagonist) application decreased both rod-cone tracer coupling and rod input to cones. These results show that endogenous activation of cone CB1 receptors decreases rod-cone coupling in the day when D-4 receptors are activated but increases it at night when D-4 receptors are not activated. Therefore, the D-4 receptor-dependent day/night switch in the effects of CB1 receptor activation results in an enhancement of the day/night difference in rod-cone coupling. This synergistic interaction increases detection of very dim large objects at night and fine spatial details in the day.

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