4.8 Article

Direction selectivity in retinal bipolar cell axon terminals

Journal

NEURON
Volume 109, Issue 18, Pages 2928-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.07.008

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Funding

  1. VELUX FONDEN Postdoctoral Ophthalmology Research Fellowship [27786]
  2. Lundbeck Foundation [DANDRITE-R248-2016-2518, R344-2020-300]
  3. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF15OC0017252, NNF20OC0064395]
  4. Carlsberg Foundation [CF170085]
  5. European Research Council [638730]
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [638730] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Through two-photon glutamate imaging, it was discovered that direction selectivity arises early at bipolar cell outputs, with individual bipolar cells containing distinct populations of axon terminal boutons with different preferred directions. Tuning at these boutons relies on cholinergic excitation and GABAergic inhibition, contributing to the incremental refinement of directional tuning in the excitatory visual pathway.
The ability to encode the direction of image motion is fundamental to our sense of vision. Direction selectivity along the four cardinal directions is thought to originate in direction-selective ganglion cells (DSGCs) because of directionally tuned GABAergic suppression by starburst cells. Here, by utilizing two-photon glutamate imaging to measure synaptic release, we reveal that direction selectivity along all four directions arises earlier than expected at bipolar cell outputs. Individual bipolar cells contained four distinct populations of axon terminal boutons with different preferred directions. We further show that this bouton-specific tuning relies on cholinergic excitation from starburst cells and GABAergic inhibition from wide-field amacrine cells. DSGCs received both tuned directionally aligned inputs and untuned inputs from among heterogeneously tuned glutamatergic bouton populations. Thus, directional tuning in the excitatory visual pathway is incrementally refined at the bipolar cell axon terminals and their recipient DSGC dendrites by two different neurotransmitters co-released from starburst cells.

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