AI Article Synopsis

  • EPI disrupts spontaneous retinal activity by decorrelating RGCs and eliminating retinal waves in both mice and ferrets.
  • Early studies in ferrets suggested EPI blocked all RGC action potentials, but newer mouse studies show it selectively silences some RGCs while enhancing others' activity.
  • Understanding these differences is crucial for interpreting past experimental use of EPI in retinal activity studies.

Article Abstract

Epibatidine (EPI), a potent cholinergic agonist, disrupts acetylcholine-dependent spontaneous retinal activity. Early patch-clamp recordings in juvenile ferrets suggested that EPI blocks all retinal ganglion cell (RGC) action potentials when applied to the retina. In contrast, recent experiments on the developing mouse that relied on multielectrode array (MEA) recordings reported that EPI application decorrelates the activity of neighboring RGCs and eliminates retinal waves while preserving the spiking activity of many neurons. The different techniques used in previous studies raise the question of whether EPI has different effects on RGC activity in mouse compared with that in ferret. A resolution of this issue is essential for interpreting the results of developmental studies that relied on EPI to manipulate retinal activity. Our goal was to compare the effects of EPI on the spontaneous discharges of RGCs in mouse and ferret using 60-electrode MEA as well as patch-clamp recordings during the developmental stage when retinal waves are driven by acetylcholine in both species. We found that in both mouse and ferret EPI decorrelates RGC activity and eliminates retinal waves. However, EPI does not block all spontaneous activity in either species. Instead, our whole cell recordings reveal that EPI silences more than half of all RGCs while significantly increasing the activity of the remainder. These results have important implications for interpreting the results of previous studies that relied on this cholinergic agonist to perturb retinal activity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2604840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.90303.2008DOI Listing

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