April 2011
Volume 52, Issue 14
Free
ARVO Annual Meeting Abstract  |   April 2011
Spatially Asymmetric Reorganization Of Inhibition Establishes A Motion Sensitive Circuit
Author Affiliations & Notes
  • Keisuke Yonehara
    Neural Circuit Laboratories, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland
  • Kamill Balint
    Neural Circuit Laboratories, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland
  • Masaharu Noda
    Division of Molecular Neurobiology, National Institute for Basic Biology, Okazaki, Japan
  • Georg Nagel
    Botanik I, Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
  • Ernst Bamberg
    Max-Planck-Institut für Biophysik, Frankfurt, Germany
  • Botond Roska
    Neural Circuit Laboratories, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland
  • Footnotes
    Commercial Relationships  Keisuke Yonehara, None; Kamill Balint, None; Masaharu Noda, None; Georg Nagel, None; Ernst Bamberg, None; Botond Roska, None
  • Footnotes
    Support  FMI, ONR, Marie Curie Excellence Grant, NCCR genetics, ERC, EU RETICIRC, EU TREATRUSH, EU OPTONEURO to B.R., EMBO Long-Term fellowship to K.Y.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science April 2011, Vol.52, 1605. doi:
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      Keisuke Yonehara, Kamill Balint, Masaharu Noda, Georg Nagel, Ernst Bamberg, Botond Roska; Spatially Asymmetric Reorganization Of Inhibition Establishes A Motion Sensitive Circuit. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 2011;52(14):1605.

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      © ARVO (1962-2015); The Authors (2016-present)

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Abstract

Purpose: : Spatial asymmetries in neural connectivity play an important role in creating basic building blocks of neuronal processing. A key circuit module of directionally selective (DS) retinal ganglion cells is a spatially asymmetric inhibitory input from starburst amacrine cells. It is not known how and when this circuit asymmetry is established during development.

Methods: : Here we photostimulate mouse starburst cells targeted with channelrhodopsin-2 while recording from a single genetically labelled type of DS cell. We follow the spatial distribution of synaptic strengths between starburst and DS cells during early postnatal development before these neurons can respond to a physiological light stimulus, and confirm connectivity by monosynaptically restricted transsynaptic Rabies viral tracing.

Results: : We show that asymmetry develops rapidly over a 2-day period through an intermediate state in which random or symmetric synaptic connections have been established. The development of asymmetry involves the spatially selective reorganization of inhibitory synaptic inputs. Intriguingly, the spatial distribution of excitatory synaptic inputs from starburst cells is significantly more symmetric than that of the inhibitory inputs at the end of this developmental period.

Conclusions: : Our work demonstrates a rapid developmental switch from a symmetric to asymmetric input distribution for inhibition in the neural circuit of a principal cell.

Keywords: retinal connections, networks, circuitry • retinal development • ganglion cells 
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