» Articles » PMID: 25377639

Eye-specific Retinogeniculate Segregation Proceeds Normally Following Disruption of Patterned Spontaneous Retinal Activity

Overview
Journal Neural Dev
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Neurology
Date 2014 Nov 8
PMID 25377639
Citations 9
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Spontaneous retinal activity (SRA) is important during eye-specific segregation within the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN), but the feature(s) of activity critical for retinogeniculate refinement are controversial. Pharmacologically or genetically manipulating cholinergic signaling during SRA perturbs correlated retinal ganglion cell (RGC) spiking and disrupts eye-specific retinofugal refinement in vivo, consistent with an instructive role for SRA during visual system development. Paradoxically, ablating the starburst amacrine cells (SACs) that generate cholinergic spontaneous activity disrupts correlated RGC firing without impacting retinal activity levels or eye-specific segregation in the dLGN. Such experiments suggest that patterned SRA during retinal waves is not critical for eye-specific refinement and instead, normal activity levels are permissive for retinogeniculate development. Here we revisit the effects of ablating the cholinergic network during eye-specific segregation and show that SAC ablation disrupts, but does not eliminate, retinal waves with no concomitant impact on normal eye-specific segregation in the dLGN.

Results: We induced SAC ablation in postnatal ferret pups beginning at birth by intraocular injection of a novel immunotoxin selective for the ferret vesicular acetylcholine transporter (Ferret VAChT-Sap). Through dual-patch whole-cell and multi-electrode array recording we found that SAC ablation altered SRA patterns and led to significantly smaller retinal waves compared with controls. Despite these defects, eye-specific segregation was normal. Further, interocular competition for target territory in the dLGN proceeded in cases where SAC ablation was asymmetric in the two eyes.

Conclusions: Our data demonstrate normal eye-specific retinogeniculate development despite significant abnormalities in patterned SRA. Comparing our current results with earlier studies suggests that defects in retinal wave size, absolute levels of SRA, correlations between RGC pairs, RGC burst frequency, high frequency RGC firing during bursts, and the number of spikes per RGC burst are each uncorrelated with abnormalities in eye-specific segregation in the dLGN. An increase in the fraction of asynchronous spikes occurring outside of bursts and waves correlates with eye-specific segregation defects in studies reported to date. These findings highlight the relative importance of different features of SRA while providing additional constraints for computational models of Hebbian plasticity mechanisms in the developing visual system.

Citing Articles

Low Frequency Ultrasound With Injection of NMO-IgG and Complement Produces Lesions Different From Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis Mice.

Xiang W, Xie C, Luo J, Zhang W, Zhao X, Yang H Front Immunol. 2021; 12:727750.

PMID: 34721390 PMC: 8551829. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.727750.


Chronic Activation of Gp1 mGluRs Leads to Distinct Refinement of Neural Network Activity through Non-Canonical p53 and Akt Signaling.

Liu D, Soriano S, Yook Y, Lizarazo S, Eagleman D, Tsai N eNeuro. 2020; 7(2).

PMID: 32161037 PMC: 7218008. DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0438-19.2020.


Cholinergic neural activity directs retinal layer-specific angiogenesis and blood retinal barrier formation.

Weiner G, Shah S, Angelopoulos C, Bartakova A, Pulido R, Murphy A Nat Commun. 2019; 10(1):2477.

PMID: 31171770 PMC: 6554348. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10219-8.


Monocular enucleation alters retinal waves in the surviving eye.

Failor S, Ng A, Cheng H Neural Dev. 2018; 13(1):4.

PMID: 29573745 PMC: 5866508. DOI: 10.1186/s13064-018-0101-1.


A subset of ipRGCs regulates both maturation of the circadian clock and segregation of retinogeniculate projections in mice.

Chew K, Renna J, McNeill D, Fernandez D, Keenan W, Thomsen M Elife. 2017; 6.

PMID: 28617242 PMC: 5513697. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.22861.


References
1.
Stellwagen D, Shatz C, Feller M . Dynamics of retinal waves are controlled by cyclic AMP. Neuron. 1999; 24(3):673-85. DOI: 10.1016/s0896-6273(00)81121-6. View

2.
Ackman J, Burbridge T, Crair M . Retinal waves coordinate patterned activity throughout the developing visual system. Nature. 2012; 490(7419):219-25. PMC: 3962269. DOI: 10.1038/nature11529. View

3.
Rossi F, Pizzorusso T, Porciatti V, Marubio L, Maffei L, Changeux J . Requirement of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor beta 2 subunit for the anatomical and functional development of the visual system. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001; 98(11):6453-8. PMC: 33489. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.101120998. View

4.
Stellwagen D, Shatz C . An instructive role for retinal waves in the development of retinogeniculate connectivity. Neuron. 2002; 33(3):357-67. DOI: 10.1016/s0896-6273(02)00577-9. View

5.
Lo F, Ziburkus J, Guido W . Synaptic mechanisms regulating the activation of a Ca(2+)-mediated plateau potential in developing relay cells of the LGN. J Neurophysiol. 2002; 87(3):1175-85. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00715.1999. View