Author:
GREEN DANIEL G.,KAPOUSTA-BRUNEAU NATALIA V.
Abstract
The origins of the a- and b-wave
of the ERG were studied using simultaneous recordings made
across the receptor layer and the full thickness of a piece
of isolated albino rat retina. An inwardly directed current
flowing across the rod outer segments was eliminated from
the recording when postsynaptic activity was blocked with
cobalt or when current source density measurements were
made along the length of the outer segments. Rod photovoltages
were inferred by removing extraneous field potentials from
the recordings made across the photoreceptor layer. The
spatial properties of the photovoltage indicates the responses
came from an area about 100 μm in diameter. The glutamate
analog, APB, which blocks depolarizing bipolar cells, eliminated
the b-wave but left the a-wave unaffected.
The ERG component due to depolarizing bipolar cells was
inferred by subtracting recordings obtained before and
after APB. After treatment with APB a slow component remained.
This component was completely blocked by barium (200 μM),
which blocks potassium channels on Müller cells. Barium
had virtually no effect on low-intensity photovoltages
but did affect the amplitude and shape of the saturated
responses. Barium increased the amplitude of the component
of the ERG which underlies the b-wave. It was
concluded that the depolarizing bipolar cells directly
generate the b-wave of the ERG.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
128 articles.
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