Retinal ganglion cell defects cause decision shifts in visually evoked defense responses.

J Neurophysiol

Retinal Circuit Development and Genetics Unit, Neurobiology-Neurodegeneration and Repair Laboratory, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mice exhibit different defensive reactions (flight or freezing) to varying visual stimuli, such as looming and sweeping movements that resemble predators.
  • Research revealed that the absence of certain retinal ganglion cell (RGC) types, specifically in Brn3b knockout mice, disrupts their fleeing response to looming threats while the freeze response remains unaffected.
  • The study suggests that specific RGC subpopulations separate visual cues for flight and freezing responses, indicating that the processing of threatening stimuli may begin at the retinal level before reaching the brain.

Article Abstract

A variety of visual cues can trigger defensive reactions in mice and other species. In mice, looming stimuli that mimic an approaching aerial predator elicit flight or freezing reactions, while sweeping stimuli that mimic an aerial predator flying parallel to the ground typically elicit freezing. The retinal ganglion cell (RGC) types involved in these circuits are largely unknown. We previously discovered that loss of RGC subpopulations in Brn3b knockout mice results in distinct visual response deficits. Here, we report that retinal or global loss of Brn3b selectively ablates the fleeing response to looming stimuli while leaving the freeze response intact. In contrast, freezing responses to sweeping stimuli are significantly affected. Genetic manipulations removing three RGC subpopulations (Brn3a betta RGCs, Opn4Brn3b, and Brn3cBrn3b RGCs) result in milder phenocopies of Brn3b knockout response deficits. These findings show that flight and freezing responses to distinct visual cues are mediated by circuits that can already be separated at the level of the retina, potentially by enlisting dedicated RGC types. Flight and freezing response choices evoked by visual stimuli are controlled by brain stem and thalamic circuits. Genetically modified mice with loss of specific retinal ganglion cell (RGC) subpopulations have altered flight versus freezing choices in response to some but not other visual stimuli. This finding suggests that "threatening" visual stimuli may be computed already at the level of the retina and communicated via dedicated pathways (RGCs) to the brain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8356780PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00474.2019DOI Listing

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