Reciprocal Synaptic Interactions Between Rod Bipolar Cells and Amacrine Cells in the Rat Retina

Author:

Hartveit Espen1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Bergen, N-5009 Bergen, Norway

Abstract

Reciprocal synaptic interactions between rod bipolar cells and amacrine cells in the rat retina. Reciprocal synaptic transmission between rod bipolar cells and presumed A17 amacrine cells was studied by whole cell voltage-clamp recording of rod bipolar cells in a rat retinal slice preparation. Depolarization of a rod bipolar cell evoked two identifiable types of Ca2+ current, a T-type current that activated at about −70 mV and a current with L-type pharmacology that activated at about −50 mV. Depolarization to greater than or equal to −50 mV also evoked an increase in the frequency of postsynaptic currents (PSCs). The PSCs reversed at ∼ E Cl (the chloride equilibrium potential), followed changes in E Cl, and were blocked by γ-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) and GABAC receptor antagonists and thus were identified as GABAergic inhibitory PSCs (IPSCs). Bipolar cells with cut axons displayed the T-type current but lacked an L-type current and depolarization-evoked IPSCs. Thus L-type Ca2+ channels are placed strategically at the axon terminals to mediate transmitter release from rod bipolar cells. The IPSCs were blocked by the non- N-methyl-d-aspartate (non-NMDA) receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione, indicating that non-NMDA receptors mediate the feed-forward bipolar-to-amacrine excitation. The NMDA receptor antagonist 3-((RS)-2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonic acid had no consistent effect on the depolarization-evoked IPSCs, indicating that activation of NMDA receptors is not essential for the feedforward excitation. Tetrodotoxin (a blocker of voltage-gated Na+channels) reversibly suppressed the reciprocal response in some cells but not in others, indicating that graded potentials are sufficient for transmitter release from A17 amacrine cells, but suggesting that voltage-gated Na+ channels, under some conditions, can contribute to transmitter release.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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