AI Article Synopsis

  • The study utilized wild-type and genetically modified mice to investigate the functional circuits in the inner retina.
  • The nob mouse, which has impaired communication between photoreceptors and depolarizing bipolar cells, relies solely on hyperpolarizing bipolar cells for light response, while transducin null mice depend on cone activity.
  • c-fos expression was used as a marker to analyze retinal circuit activation, revealing that light stimulus intensity affected c-fos levels and that mice without photoreceptors showed minimal activation, indicating that c-fos can help map retinal functional circuits.

Article Abstract

We have used wild-type mice and mice possessing defects in specific retinal circuits in order to more clearly define functional circuits of the inner retina. The retina of the nob mouse lacks communication between photoreceptors and depolarizing bipolar cells (DBCs). Thus, all light driven activity in the nob mouse is mediated via remaining hyperpolarizing bipolar cell (HBC) circuits. Transducin null (Tr alpha-/-) mice lack rod photoreceptor activity and thus remaining retinal circuits are solely generated via cone photoreceptor activity. Activation in inner retinal circuits in each of these mice was identified by monitoring light-induced expression of an immediate early gene, c-fos. The number of cells expressing c-fos in the inner retina was dependent upon stimulus intensity and was altered in a systematic fashion in mice with known retinal mutations. To determine whether c-fos is activated via circuits other than photoreceptors in the outer retina, we examined c-fos expression in tulp1-/- mice that lack photoreceptors in the outer retina; these mice showed virtually no c-fos activity following light exposure. Double-labeling immunohistochemical studies were carried out to more clearly define the population of c-fos expressing amacrine cells. Our results indicate that c-fos may be used to map functional circuits in the retina.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0952523804216078DOI Listing

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