Abstract
Abstract
Retinal direction-selectivity originates in starburst amacrine cells (SACs),
which display a centrifugal preference, responding with greater depolarization
to a stimulus expanding from soma to dendrites than to a collapsing stimulus.
Various mechanisms were hypothesized to underlie SAC centrifugal preference, but
dissociating them is experimentally challenging and the mechanisms remain
debatable. To address this issue, we developed the Retinal Stimulation Modeling
Environment (RSME), a multifaceted data-driven retinal model that encompasses
detailed neuronal morphology and biophysical properties, retina-tailored
connectivity scheme and visual input. Using a genetic algorithm, we demonstrated
that spatiotemporally diverse excitatory inputs – sustained in the proximal and
transient in the distal processes – are sufficient to generate experimentally
validated centrifugal preference in a single SAC. Reversing these input kinetics
did not produce any centrifugal-preferring SAC. We then explored the
contribution of SAC-SAC inhibitory connections in establishing the centrifugal
preference. SAC inhibitory network enhanced the centrifugal preference, but
failed to generate it in its absence. Embedding a direction selective ganglion
cell (DSGC) in a SAC network showed that the known SAC-DSGC asymmetric
connectivity by itself produces direction selectivity. Still, this selectivity
is sharpened in a centrifugal-preferring SAC network. Finally, we use RSME to
demonstrate the contribution of SAC-SAC inhibitory connections in mediating
direction selectivity and recapitulate recent experimental findings. Thus, using
RSME, we obtained a comprehensive mechanistic understanding of SACs’ centrifugal
preference and its contribution to direction selectivity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory