The electroretinogram (ERG) has been employed for years to collect information about retinal function and pathology. The usefulness of this noninvasive test depends on our understanding of the cell sources that generate the ERG. Important contributors to the ERG are glial Müller cells (MCs), which are capable of generating substantial transretinal potentials in response to light-induced changes in extracellular K+ concentration ([K+]o). For instance, the MCs generate the slow PIII (sPIII) component of the ERG as a reaction to a photoreceptor-induced [K+]o decrease in the subretinal space. Similarly, an increase of [K+]o related to activity of postreceptor retinal neurons also produces transretinal glial currents, which can potentially influence the amplitude and shape of the b-wave, one of the most frequently analyzed ERG components. Although it is well documented that the majority of the b-wave originates from On-bipolar cells, some contribution from MCs was suggested many years ago and has never been experimentally rejected. In this work, detailed information about light-evoked [K+]o changes in the isolated mouse retina was collected and then analyzed with a relatively simple linear electrical model of MCs. The results demonstrate that the cornea-positive potential generated by MCs is too small to contribute noticeably to the b-wave. The analysis also explains why MCs produce the large cornea-negative sPIII subcomponent of the ERG, but no substantial cornea-positive potential.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0952523821000092 | DOI Listing |
Vis Neurosci
July 2021
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois.
The electroretinogram (ERG) has been employed for years to collect information about retinal function and pathology. The usefulness of this noninvasive test depends on our understanding of the cell sources that generate the ERG. Important contributors to the ERG are glial Müller cells (MCs), which are capable of generating substantial transretinal potentials in response to light-induced changes in extracellular K+ concentration ([K+]o).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHandb Clin Neurol
December 2019
John A. Moran Eye Center, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, United States. Electronic address:
The electrooculogram (EOG) measures the cornea-positive standing potential relative to the back of the eye. By attaching skin electrodes outside the eye near the lateral and medial canthus, the potential can be measured by having the patient move the eyes horizontally a set distance. The voltage becomes smaller in the dark, reaching its lowest potential after 8-12min, the so-called dark trough.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVis Neurosci
January 2006
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Electroretinography provides a useful noninvasive approach to evaluate cone pathway activity. Despite wide application of the cone ERG to characterize retinal function in transgenic mice and mouse models of human hereditary retinal disease, the cellular origins of the mouse cone ERG have not been well defined. Here, we address this issue using a pharmacological approach that has been previously applied to other species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
February 2003
Molecular Cellular Center for Neuroscience of Valparaiso, Faculty of Science, University of Valparaíso, P.O. Box 5030, Valparaíso, Chile.
Purpose: To study the histology and the physiological function of the retina in the neurological myelin mutant, taiep rats during the postnatal developmental period (P20-P360).
Methods: Electroretinography (ERG) was applied to evaluate intensity dependence and spectral sensitivity of the responses to light. Retinal histology, morphometry, and immunocytochemistry were used to characterize the structure of the retina, with particular emphasis on the Müller (glial) cells.
Doc Ophthalmol
September 1998
Carl-Ludwig-Institute of Physiology, University of Leipzig, Germany.
Although the rising phase of the b-wave seems to be generated mainly in the rod bipolar cells and the cone on-bipolar cells, the slow component of the electroretinogram, the c-wave, evidently originates in the Müller cells and the pigment epithelium. The c-wave has three components. One cornea-positive component derives from the pigment epithelium, while a distal cornea-negative component (slow PIII) and a proximal slow component originate in the Müller cells.
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