AI Article Synopsis

  • Displaced starburst amacrine cells (SACs) are specialized retinal interneurons that respond differently to light based on the direction it moves, showing directionally selective (DS) responses by depolarizing for outward-moving stimuli and hyperpolarizing for inward-moving ones.
  • The paper proposes a model explaining SACs' strong DS behavior, emphasizing GABA-mediated communication and glutamate signals from bipolar cells, which help create significant depolarization when light moves centrifugally while minimizing response in the opposite direction.
  • This DS behavior is robust to various parameter changes and aligns with experimental observations, suggesting that distinct Cl(-) cotransporter locations and long-lasting GABA responses enhance SAC depolarization responses.

Article Abstract

Displaced starburst amacrine cells (SACs) are retinal interneurons that exhibit GABA( A ) receptor-mediated and Cl (-) cotransporter-mediated, directionally selective (DS) light responses in the rabbit retina. They depolarize to stimuli that move centrifugally through the receptive field surround and hyperpolarize to stimuli that move centripetally through the surround (Gavrikov et al, PNAS 100(26):16047-16052, 2003, PNAS 103(49):18793-18798, 2006). They also play a key role in the activity of DS ganglion cells (DS GC; Amthor et al, Vis Neurosci 19:495-509 2002; Euler et al, Nature 418:845-852, 2002; Fried et al, Nature 420:411- 414, 2002; Gavrikov et al, PNAS 100(26):16047-16052, 2003, PNAS 103(49):18793-18798, 2006; Lee and Zhou, Neuron 51:787-799 2006; Yoshida et al, Neuron 30:771-780, 2001). In this paper we present a model of strong DS behavior of SACs which relies on the GABA-mediated communication within a tightly interconnected network of these cells and on the glutamate signal that the SACs receive from bipolar cells (a presynaptic cell that receives input from cones). We describe how a moving light stimulus can produce a large, sustained depolarization of the SAC dendritic tips that point in the direction that the stimulus moves (i.e., centrifugal motion), but produce a minimal depolarization of the dendritic tips that point in the opposite direction (i.e., centripetal motion). This DS behavior, which is quantified based on the relative size and duration of the depolarizations evoked by stimulus motion at dendritic tips pointing in opposite directions, is robust to changes of many different parameter values and consistent with experimental data. In addition, the DS behavior is strengthened under the assumptions that the Cl(-) cotransporters Na( + )-K( + )-Cl( -) and K( + )-Cl( -) are located in different regions of the SAC dendritic tree (Gavrikov et al, PNAS 103(49):18793-18798, 2006) and that GABA evokes a long-lasting response (Gavrikov et al, PNAS 100(26):16047-16052, 2003, PNAS 103(49):18793-18798, 2006; Lee and Zhou, Neuron 51:787-799, 2006). A possible mechanism is discussed based on the generation of waves of local glutamate and GABA secretion, and their postsynaptic interplay as the waves travel between cell compartments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2880707PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10827-010-0238-3DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Displaced starburst amacrine cells (SACs) are specialized retinal interneurons that respond differently to light based on the direction it moves, showing directionally selective (DS) responses by depolarizing for outward-moving stimuli and hyperpolarizing for inward-moving ones.
  • The paper proposes a model explaining SACs' strong DS behavior, emphasizing GABA-mediated communication and glutamate signals from bipolar cells, which help create significant depolarization when light moves centrifugally while minimizing response in the opposite direction.
  • This DS behavior is robust to various parameter changes and aligns with experimental observations, suggesting that distinct Cl(-) cotransporter locations and long-lasting GABA responses enhance SAC depolarization responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how light responses that are selective for the direction of image motion occur in the starburst amacrine cells in the retina, focusing on the role of chloride cotransporters NKCC and KCC.
  • It finds that blocking NKCC2 and KCC2 influences the excitability of starburst cells and disrupts their ability to respond directionally to light.
  • The research highlights that the different localizations of NKCC2 and KCC2 on proximal and distal dendrites allow for distinct GABA responses, which are crucial for encoding complex visual information in the nervous system.
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Cation--chloride cotransporters mediate neural computation in the retina.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

December 2003

Department of Neurobiology,Civitan International Research Center, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.

The ability of directionally selective (DS) retinal ganglion cells to respond selectively to stimulus motion in one direction is a classic unresolved example of computation in a local neural circuit. Recent evidence indicates that DS responses occur first in the retina in the dendrites of starburst amacrine cells (interneurons presynaptic to the ganglion cells). We report that the directional responses of starburst-cell dendrites and DS ganglion cells are highly sensitive to the polarity of the transmembrane chloride gradient.

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