The Journal of Physiology

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Journal of Physiology"

Transcription

1 J Physiol (2012) pp Characterization of Trpm1 desensitization in ON bipolar cells and its role in downstream signalling Tejinder Kaur 1 and Scott Nawy 1,2 1 Dominick P. Purpura Department of Neuroscience and 2 Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1410 Pelham Parkway, Room 525, Bronx, NY 10461, USA The Journal of Physiology Non-technical summary The retina can process over 10 log-units of changes in light intensity allowing us to see in dim starlight to bright daylight. These changes in luminosity are detected first by photoreceptors, rods and cones, and then relayed to second-order neurons, ON and OFF bipolar cells (BCs), before finally being encoded as spikes by ganglion cells (GCs). We found that ON BCs process light signals differently depending on the luminosity of the signal. In response to bright light, ON BCs undergo Ca 2+ -dependent depression, referred to as desensitization, producing a transient response to a sustained light stimulus; however, no such transformation occurred in dim light. Furthermore, every ON BC was capable of producing desensitization. This desensitization was passed to GCs, resulting in transient spike trains. In conclusion, ON BCs play an important role in retinal processing by converting a sustained light signal into a transient one, in order to prevent saturation. Abstract ON bipolar cells invert the sign of light responses from hyperpolarizing to depolarizing before passing them on to ganglion cells. Light responses are generated when a cation channel, recently identified as Trpm1, opens. The amplitude of the light response rapidly decays due to desensitization of Trpm1 current. The role of Trpm1 desensitization in shaping light responses both in bipolar and downstream ganglion cells has not been well characterized. Here we show that two parameters, the amount and the rate of recovery from desensitization, depend on the strength of the presynaptic stimulus. Stimuli that activate less than 20% of the maximum Trpm1 current did not promote any detectable desensitization, even for prolonged periods. Beyond this threshold there was a linear relationship between the amount of desensitization and the fractional Trpm1 current. In response to stimuli that open all available channels, desensitization reduced the response to approximately 40% of the peak, with a time constant of 1 s, and recovery was slow, with a time constant of more than 20 s. In dye-filled bipolar cells classified as transient or sustained using morphological criteria, there were no significant differences in Trpm1 desensitization parameters. Trpm1 activation evoked robust EPSCs in ganglion cells, and removal of Trpm1 desensitization strongly augmented a sustained component of the ganglion cell EPSC irrespective of whether ganglion cells were of the ON or ON/OFF type. We conclude that Trpm1 desensitization impacts the kinetics of ganglion cell EPSCs, but does not underlie the sustained/transient dichotomy of neurons in the ON pathway. (Received 29 August 2011; accepted after revision 28 October 2011; first published online 31 October 2011) Corresponding author T. Kaur: Dominick P. Purpura Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1410 Pelham Parkway, Room 525, Bronx, NY 10461, USA. tejinder.kaur@phd.einstein.yu.edu Abbreviations BC, bipolar cell; DR, desensitization ratio; GC, ganglion cell; IPL, inner plexiform layer; L-AP4, 2-amino-4-phosphonobutanoic acid; OPL, outer plexiform layer. DOI: /jphysiol

2 180 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol Introduction Changes in light intensity are detected first by rod and cone photoreceptors, and then relayed to two classes of second-order neurons, ON and OFF bipolar cells (BCs), before finally being encoded as spike rate by ganglion cells (GCs). To generate postsynaptic responses to photoreceptor input, ON BCs express a metabotropic glutamate receptor (mglur6) (Nakajima et al. 1993), a G protein (Go) (Nawy, 1999; Dhingra et al. 2000, 2002) and at least one type of synaptic channel Trpm1 (Morgans et al. 2009; Shen et al. 2009; Koike et al. 2010). Glutamate released from photoreceptors in darkness binds to mglur6, activates Go and closes Trpm1. In light, inhibition of Trpm1 is relieved, and the channel opens, depolarizing ON BCs. In all species thus far examined, including tiger salamander (Awatramani & Slaughter, 2000; Nawy, 2004), dogfish (Shiells & Falk, 1999) and mouse (Berntson et al. 2004) retina, Trpm1 undergoes a form of Ca 2+ -dependent short-term depression during prolonged exposure to light that we have termed desensitization (Nawy, 2004), referring to the decrease in Trpm1 current in the presence of light stimulus. Desensitization has been proposed to extend the dynamic operating range of the ON BC (Shiells & Falk, 1999; Berntson et al. 2004). Additionally, desensitization could conserve bandwidth in GCs downstream, particularly those that collect input from a large number of BCs. By restoring the membrane potential of illuminated ON BCs and preventing them from continuously releasing transmitter, desensitization would ensure that GCs remain capable of responding to ON BCs in other regions of the GC receptive field. One prediction of this model is that selective elimination of Trpm1 desensitization should increase the sustained component of the GC EPSC and increase spike rate during continuous ON BC depolarization. Here we directly test this prediction by recording GC EPSCs and spike rate both before and during block of Trpm1 desensitization. By locally applying Ca 2+ -free solution to the region of the ON BC dendrites, we were able to prevent desensitization without compromising synaptic transmission from ON BCs to GCs. In addition to conserving GC bandwidth, Trpm1 desensitization may also play a role in the refinement of specific ON BC subtypes. Such subtypes can be distinguished based on both morphological and functional characteristics (Euler & Wassle, 1995; Hartveit, 1997; Awatramani & Slaughter, 2000; Wu et al. 2000; Pang et al. 2004). One such characteristic is the shape of the light response, which can be either transient or sustained. An attractive model is that ON BCs may express different components of the mglur6 cascade such that desensitization of Trpm1 may be more prominent in ON cells with transient light responses than in cells with sustained responses. Accordingly we surveyed a large population of ON BCs and measured properties of desensitization in each cell. We used a pharmacological approach which allowed us to bypass photoreceptors, and measure the kinetics of Trpm1 currents that could be attributed to purely postsynaptic mechanisms. Based on cell morphology and layers of termination, the ON BCs examined formed a heterogeneous population of subtypes, including transient and sustained. Analysis of the distribution of both the desensitization ratios (DRs), a measure of the strength of desensitization, and the rates of desensitization reveal no evidence for differences in the desensitization of Trpm1 current across ON BC subtypes. This suggests that fundamental differences in the mglur6 cascade may not underlie the formation of transient and sustained channels of information in the retina. Methods Ethical approval All experimental procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, and the Institute for Animal Studies at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. The authors confirm that the experiments comply with the policies and regulations of The Journal of Physiology (Drummond, 2009). Slice preparation Larval tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) were obtained from Charles Sullivan (Nashville, TN, USA) and kept on a 12 h light dark cycle at 4 6 C. Retinal slices were prepared as described previously (Nawy, 2004). Briefly, the animal was anaesthetized by immersion in 3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester (2 g l 1 ) (Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA), and killed by decapitation and double-pithing. Theeyeswereenucleatedandtheretinaswereremoved. The isolated retina was placed on a piece of filter paper (0.65 mm nitrocellulose membrane, Millipore) with the vitreal side down and sliced at μm thickness using a tissue slicer (Stoelting). Slices were then transferred to the recording chamber and viewed with an upright Olympus microscope equipped with a 40 water immersion lens. Slices were continuously bathed in oxygenated solution containing, unless otherwise noted (in mm): 108 NaCl, 2.5 KCl,2CaCl 2, 1.2 MgCl 2,5glucose,5Hepes,0.1picrotoxin, buffered to ph 7.8 with NaOH. Electrophysiology and analysis Patch pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass (WPI) using a Narishige vertical puller with electrode resistance of 4 7 M. Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings of ON

3 J Physiol Role of Trpm1 desensitization 181 BCs and GCs were performed with an Axopatch 200A amplifier (Molecular Devices) at room temperature, and data were low-pass filtered at 1 khz. ON BCs and GCs were held at 40 mv and 70 mv, respectively. The recordings had input and series resistance of M and 5 15 M, respectively. The internal solution contained (in mm): 95 potassium gluconate, 9 KCl, 10 Hepes, 1 MgCl 2,0.5EGTA,4Mg 2+ -ATP and 1 Li-GTP, buffered to ph 7.4 with KOH. Both internal and external solutions had an osmolarity of mosmol l 1.Loose-patch recordings in GCs were made in voltage-clamp mode using extracellular solution in the recording pipette at 0 mv. ON BCs were identified based on their response shape to mglur6 antagonist and their position in the slice using fluorescence imaging. Data analysis was performed with Axograph X and Kaleidagraph (Synergy Software, Reading PA, USA). Spontaneous EPSC events were detected and analysed with Axograph, software written by John Clements. We measured the number of quanta released from ON BCs by integrating the entire GC EPSC in 100 ms time intervals and dividing each interval by the integral of the averaged spontaneous EPSC for that cell. This yielded the number of quanta released during each time interval. For each ON BC, the magnitude of desensitization was quantified as desensitization ratio (DR): 1 (steady state current /peak current ). Drug delivery An agonist of mglur6 receptor, 2-amino-4- phosphonobutanoic acid (L-AP4), was added to the bath solution just before the start of experiments to mimic darkness and a simulated light stimulus was generated by application of the mglur antagonist LY A fast perfusion system or a multi-channel valve system was used to deliver drugs at BC dendrites. The fast perfusion system consisted of two flexible fused silica capillary tubes (ID= 250μM) containing LY in one and L-AP4 (2 4 μm) in the other. The time required for the solution exchange was estimated by measuring the open-tip current with a solution containing 120 mm or 300 mm NaCl. The 10 90% rise time of the open-tip current ranged between 6 and 20 ms. Stimulus intensity was mimicked by varying the concentration of either LY from 100 μm (bright light) to 2 μm (moderate light) or glutamate from 1 mm (dark) to 100μM (dim light). For experiments that required exchange of more than two solutions, we fused up to four tubes together. The solution flow was controlled with a pinch valve system (Warner instruments). Flowpipe translations were made by an attached piezo-electric bimorph and driven by a stimulus isolation unit (A.M.P.I.). In other experiments, a picospritzer (Parker) was used to apply K + to ON BC dendrites by pressure ejection (2 4 psi). Cell morphology Bipolar cells were loaded with 100 μm Alexa 488 fluorescent dye (Invitrogen) through the recording pipette. Images were acquired with a cooled CCD camera (Hamamatsu C8484) using μmanger (Edelstein et al. 2010). Images were stacked and superimposed in ImageJ (NIH), and further processed in Gimp to improve the contrast and brightness. Finally, the processed image was superimposed with the DIC image. The layer of axon termination was determined offline in ImageJ by measuring the distance of deepest axon ramification in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). Results Desensitization of Trpm1 current can be triggered by multiple sources of calcium Trpm1 was recently identified as the synaptic transduction channel that mediates synaptic input from photoreceptors to ON BCs in mouse (Morgans et al. 2009; Shen et al. 2009; Koike et al. 2010). Furthermore, Trpm1 was localized to ON BC dendrites in the outer plexiform layer (OPL) using antibodies against Trpm1 in mouse and human retina (Morgans et al. 2009; van Genderen et al. 2009). There is no direct genetic evidence for Trpm1 in salamander, as the genome has not been sequenced yet; however, Trpm1 protein is found or predicted in species ranging from humans to amphibians suggesting the existence of Trpm1 in salamander as well (Table 1) (Li et al. 2009; van Genderen et al. 2009). Furthermore, all components of the mglur6 signalling cascade have been conserved across species: mouse, rat, mudpuppy, salamander and cat (Slaughter & Miller, 1981; Hirano & MacLeish, 1991; Nakajima et al. 1993; de la Villa et al. 1995; Hartveit et al. 1995; Euler et al. 1996).. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that Trpm1 and the channel properties are also conserved across species. To elicit Trpm1 currents, we bypass photoreceptors and activate the mglur6 receptor directly by switching from an mglur6 agonist (L-AP4) to an antagonist (LY341495, see Methods) (Awatramani & Slaughter, 2000; Snellman & Nawy, 2002). Trpm1 currents activated with a 10 90% rise time of 0.33 ± 0.02s. After reaching a peak, the current declined exponentially with a time constant of 1.07 ± 0.04 s to a steady-state value that was approximately 42 ± 1.1% of the peak (Fig. 1A). This decline in Trpm1 current has been referred to as desensitization (Nawy, 2004). Under current clamp (Fig. 1B), Trpm1

4 182 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol Table 1. Trpm1 protein sequence homology in various species Species Per cent identity Per cent similarity Accession Length to human to human number (van Genderen et al. 2009) Human NP_ Chimpanzee XP_ Macaque XP_ Horse XP_ Mouse NP_ Rat NP_ Chicken XP_ Anole XP_ Frog XP_ Zebrafish XP_ The per cent identity/similarity was identified using BLAST search. Trpm1 protein is predicted for all species except for mouse and human based on sequence homology and alignment. desensitization resulted in a repolarization of the ON BC membrane to potentials that would not be expected to support transmitter release from BC terminals as L-type voltage-gated Ca 2+ channels are not well activated at 50 mv (Protti & Llano, 1998; Singer & Diamond, 2003; Snellman et al. 2009). The desensitization rates in current clamp were slower than in voltage clamp (1.9 ± 0.5 s; n = 3), suggesting that activation or inactivation of voltage-dependent channels may oppose the effect of desensitization on membrane potential. The time course for Trpm1 activation and desensitization were not limited by solution exchange time which was significantly faster when measured in OFF bipolar cells with glutamate. The 10 90% rise time for OFF BCs was 0.14 ± 0.02 s (n = 7, P < compared to ON BCs, Fig. 1A, inset). Trpm1 desensitization has previously been shown to be Ca 2+ dependent (Shiells & Falk, 1999; Berntson et al. 2004; Nawy, 2004). In agreement with previous results, removing extracellular Ca 2+ strongly reduced desensitization (Fig. 1C). The desensitization ratio (DR, see Methods) was 0.54 ± 0.03 in 2 mm extracellular Ca 2+ and 0.11 ± 0.03 in nominally Ca 2+ -free extracellular solution (P < , n = 9, Fig. 1D). These results are consistent with the idea that Ca 2+ entry through the channel leads to Trpm1 desensitization, but do not address the possibility that Ca 2+ originating from other sources could also drive desensitization. Ca 2+ release from internal stores in dendrites of isolated rod BCs in response to group I mglur activation has been reported (Koulen et al. 2005). To test the possibility that Ca 2+ release from internal stores is capable of desensitizing Trpm1, caffeine was locally applied to BCs and Trpm1 currents were then evoked. Within 1 min of caffeine application, Trpm1 currents were strongly depressed, presumably due to Ca 2+ -induced Trpm1 desensitization (Fig. 1E).Theeffectofcaffeinepersistedintheabsence of extracellular Ca 2+ (P < compared to control, n = 9, Fig. 1F), suggesting that the release of Ca 2+ from stores alone can trigger desensitization. While Ca 2+ stores are sufficient to induce desensitization, it is unclear whether they are necessary for this process. To address this possibility, we depleted the internal stores prior to the start of the experiments with 10 μm thapsigargin, which is a non-competitive inhibitor of sarco-endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ -ATPases. We found that Trpm1 kinetics were unaffected and desensitization was similar to control (DR = 0.56 ± 0.03, n = 6; compared to control 0.58 ± 0.01, n = 94, P = 0.55). Although Ca 2+ stores are apparently not required for Trpm1 desensitization, it is possible that Ca 2+ store release could act synergistically with Ca 2+ entering through the Trpm1 channel to lower the threshold for activation of desensitization. Threshold behaviour of desensitization prevents loss of synaptic gain following weak stimulation The experiments described above were carried out using an all-or-none protocol in which mglur6 was alternately activated with a saturating concentration of agonist or inhibited with a high concentration of antagonist. We next examined the impact of desensitization on moderate to weak stimuli. To accomplish this, the maximum possible Trpm1 current was first evoked by switching from 1 mm glutamate to a test solution containing 100 μm LY Progressively weaker stimuli were then presented to the same cell by switching from 1 mm glutamate to test solutions containing either 2 μm LY341495, 10 μm glutamate or 100 μm glutamate (Fig. 2A). For these experiments we used glutamate as the mglur6 agonist because it was easier to work with than the high-affinity agonist L-AP4. For each cell, the peak Trpm1 response and DR obtained with each test solution were expressed as a fraction of the maximum peak response

5 J Physiol Role of Trpm1 desensitization 183 and DR (i.e. in the presence of 100 μm LY341495). For stimuli that activated less than 20% of the total Trpm1 current, most points fell to the right of the regression line, indicating a sublinear relationship between Trpm1 activation and desensitization. However, for stronger stimuli, desensitization was highly correlated with the size of the current (correlation coefficient 0.93, P < , Fig. 2B, n = 42 cells). These findings are consistent with the findings of an earlier study that moderate to bright light intensities induce stronger desensitization compared to dim light (Berntson et al. 2004). To further investigate the relationship between weak stimuli and desensitization, we measured the amplitude of the peak Trpm1 current evoked by 100 μm LY before and after a long (typically 60 s) application of a test stimulus that evoked about 20% of the maximum Trpm1 current (Fig. 2C). In this example, the amplitude of the peak response was unchanged following incubation in low glutamate (Fig. 2D). Overall, exposure to low glutamate resulted in a less than 10% depression of the peak response (91.5 ± 5.2% of control response, n = 7). This finding implies that a continuous background light stimulus that Figure 1. Desensitization of Trpm1 current is Ca 2+ dependent Response of an ON BC to switching from L-AP4 (4 μm) toasolution containing 100 μm LY recorded in voltage (A) and current clamp (B). Records are from different cells. Inset, expanded time scale of response onset for ON and OFF BCs to an application of LY and glutamate, respectively. Response amplitudes were normalized to emphasize the response activation times. The vertical line marks the stimulus onset to trigger flowpipe translation and solution flow. Scale bar: 0.2 and 250 ms. C, response of another ON BC to LY in 2 mm Ca 2+ and nominally 0 mm Ca 2+. D, summary of the effect of Ca 2+ on desensitization ratio (D.R.), defined as 1 (steady state/peak); n = 9 cells, P < E, response of an ON BC to LY following a 5 min application of caffeine (10 mm) in the presence of L-AP4. F, summary of the effects of caffeine on peak current amplitude in the presence of 2 mm (n = 8, P < 0.01) and nominally 0 mm external Ca 2+ (n = 10, P < 0.01). Figure 2. Trpm1 desensitization initiates when Ca 2+ is elevated above threshold A, response of an On BC to varied stimulus intensity by changing concentrations of mglur6 ligands. Records are from the same cell. B, summary data showing the relationship between DR and the fraction of maximum current elicited by 100 μm LY For each cell, the response to 100 μm LY and one other concentration of agonist or antagonist (test stimulus) was measured. The DR of the test stimulus was normalized to the maximum to eliminate cell-to-cell variability and plotted. The correlation coefficient for the data was 0.93 and r 2 of the fit was C, response from an ON BC to a prolonged weak stimulus, 10 μm glutamate, followed by a strong stimulus, 100 μm LY D, an overlay of the response to 100 μm LY application before and after pairing it with the weak stimulus. Per cent response evoked by 100 μm LY when pre-treated with 10 μm glutamate was 91.5 ± 5.2% of control (n = 7).

6 184 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol evokes 20% or less of the total Trpm1 current in ON BCs will not substantially activate the desensitization mechanism and therefore will not compromise synaptic gain. The response to repetitive stimulation in ON BCs is limited by Trpm1 desensitization The rate of recovery from Trpm1 desensitization could impose limitations on the frequency of ON BC activation. To address this possibility, we gave paired applications of 100 μm LY to open Trpm1 channels (Fig. 3A). Data were pooled from eight cells, and the mean recovery time was fitted by a single exponential with a time constant of 25 ± 3.5 s (Fig. 3C), much longer than the value of 375 ms obtained from mouse rod BCs (Berntson et al. 2004). We repeated these experiments using a lower concentration of LY (5 μm), which elicited a Trpm1 current that was 75 ± 2.1% (n = 16) of the maximum currentobtained in 100 μm of the antagonist. Under these conditions, recovery from desensitization was much faster (Fig. 3B), with a time constant of 5.6 ± 1.8s(Fig.3C). In both conditions, the peak amplitude varied with paired application of LY341495, but the steady-state current remained unaltered and did not display paired-pulse depression. When Ca 2+ was absent in the bath solution, the second pulse of LY produced a response that was as large as the first (Fig. 3D) and the paired-pulse depression was minimal compared to control, supporting a role for Ca 2+ -dependent desensitization of Trpm1. The time course of recovery from desensitization may reflect the rate ofremovalofresidualca 2+, or a separate Ca 2+ -dependent process that is required for the channel to return to the fully conducting state, such as phosphorylation or dephosphorylation. Figure 3. Paired-pulse experiments reveal the rate that Trpm1 recovers from desensitization A and B, responses of an ON BC to paired applications of 100 μm or 5 μm LY in the OPL; inter-pulse intervals are indicated by a bar above the traces. C, plot of rates of recovery, calculated as the ratio of 2nd peak amplitude with respect to the 1st peak. Data were fitted with an exponential function yielding a time constant (τ) of 25 and 6 s for 100 and 5 μm LY341495, respectively. D, response to paired applications of 100 μm LY in nominally Ca 2+ -free solution. Trpm1 desensitization cannot explain transient versus sustained classes of ON bipolar cell ON BCs in the tiger salamander retina are thought to be divided into two classes, based on the kinetics of their response to light, one class responding to light transiently, and the other with a more sustained response (Awatramani & Slaughter, 2000). According to this model, each class of BCs contributes to the kinetics of ON OFF and sustained ON GCs by selective wiring to the appropriate GC type. Transient ON BCs terminate in the middle of the inner plexiform layer, near the boundary of sublaminae a and b, while sustained ON cells terminate more proximally in sublamina b (Awatramani & Slaughter, 2000). One mechanism that could account for the difference in ON BC kinetics would be differences in the properties of Trpm1 expressed in these two cell types, specifically the rate and/or magnitude of desensitization. To test this possibility, we recorded from a large number of ON BCs, targeting cell bodies with a variety of shapes and positions within the inner nuclear layer to enhance the probability of targeting different classes of ON BC. For each cell, both the magnitude and the rate of Trpm1 desensitization were measured, and the results are plotted in Fig. 4A and B.Both parameters appear to form a single distribution, and there is no evidence for a secondary peak that might indicate the presence of a second population of Trpm1 channels or a presence of a distinct sustained/transient ON BC subtypes.

7 J Physiol Role of Trpm1 desensitization 185 In addition, cells were filled with Alexa 488 to identify the stratification layer of axon termination. Wu and coworkers (2000) established the widely accepted criteria to distinguish sustained and transient ON BCs based on the ramification of deepest axon terminals. Layers 6 8 which lie just proximal to the border of sublamina b contain transient ON BCs, and layers 8 10, which are more proximal, closer to the GC layer, include sustained ON BCs (Wu et al. 2000). Following these criteria, cells were assigned to one of these two groups. Figure 4D and E shows an example of two cells and the corresponding Trpm1 currents from each category (Fig. 4F and G). There were no detectable differences in desensitization parameters in these, or any of the ON BCs identified by layer of axon termination (Fig. 4C).InarecentstudyofaTrpm1knock out mouse, Morgans et al. (2009) provided evidence for the presence of a novel, yet unidentified channel in cone ON BCs, downstream of mglur6 signalling cascade. The response kinetics were transient in the knock-out, however in WT mouse, cone ON BC responses were sustained. It is possible that the unidentified channel is functional only in the knock out, or that the differences are difficult to observe in a normal WT mouse. We did not find the existence of that novel channel in our study, perhaps due to differences in species or because salamander ON BCs receive mixed rod cone input making it difficult to activate purely cone pathway in the ON BCs. Based on our findings, we suggest that if ON BCs can be classified as either transient or sustained, that such a distinction is unlikely to be accounted for by the differential expression of Trpm1 isoforms. the RRP underlying the fast component of release, and that the slow recovery rate reflects the time required for replenishment of this pool, measured to be 8 10 s in goldfish BCs (Mennerick & Matthews, 1996; von Gersdorff & Matthews, 1997). To address this, we bypassed the mglur6/trpm1 pathway and depolarized ON BCs directly by applying isotonic K + onto their dendrites. EPSCs elicited in this way recovered quickly (Fig. 5B), indicating thatvesicledepletiondoesnotimposealimitontherateof recovery in response to paired applications of LY Application of K + generated synaptic responses rather Recovery from desensitization of Trpm1 imposes limits on ganglion cell response frequency Our results described earlier suggest that strong activation of Trpm1 receptors results in a period of ON BC quiescence, and that during this period, the ON BC membrane potential is sufficiently hyperpolarized to prevent further signalling to downstream GCs. To test this idea directly, we recorded from a GC and delivered LY to the dendrites of an ON BC that was vertically aligned with the GC. A similar strategy has been used previously to generate synaptic responses in cells that are postsynaptic to ON BCs (Chavez et al. 2006; Snellman et al. 2009). The first application of LY elicited a robust GC EPSC, while the response to the second application was dramatically reduced (Fig. 5A). The responses of GC recovered as the duration between applications was increased. The rate of recovery could be fitted by a single exponential with a time constant (τ) of 18.1 ± 2.4 s (n = 5) (Fig. 5D), in good agreement with the time constant of recovery from Trpm1 desensitization directly recorded in ON BCs. It is possible that the first pulse was sufficient to deplete Figure 4. Trpm1-mediated responses are uniform across ON BC subtypes A and B, distributions of DR and time constant of desensitization for ON BCs. The smooth curve is a fit to a single Gaussian function yielding the maxima at 0.58 and 1.0 s for DR and time constant for desensitization, respectively (R = 0.99 and 0.97). C, DRs were sorted into two groups based on the location of axon terminals in sublamina b. Cells that ramified in layers 6 8 had a mean DR of 0.55 ± 0.03 (n = 11) and 0.57 ± 0.03 for those in layers 8 10 (n = 13). There was no significant difference in Trpm1 desensitization parameters in these two groups (P = 0.64). D G, an example current trace with cell morphology from each group is shown in d-g. An ON BC terminating in layer 7 and its response is in D and F (DR = 0.69; time constant = 1.1 s); another cell in layer 10 with the current trace is shown in E and G (DR = 0.69; time constant = 0.82 s). Cells were filled with 100 μm Alexa 488 dye through the recording pipette.

8 186 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol than a direct depolarization of GC since addition of Co 2+ to the bathing solution completely blocked synaptic transmission abolishing the responses (data not shown). Although we did not apply both K + and LY to the same cells, the duration of K + application was adjusted to yield EPSCs with similar charge transfers under both conditions (K + ; ± 32.6 pa. s, n = 6, LY341495; 138 ± 36.0 pa. s, n = 6, P = 0.86) so that depolarization by either manipulation would be equally likely to result in depletion of synaptic vesicles. The Ca 2+ -dependent Trpm1 desensitization in ON BCs was abolished by locally applying Ca 2+ -free solution to the region of the BC dendrites, to prevent desensitization without compromising synaptic transmission from ON BC to GCs. Application of LY in a nominally Ca 2+ -free solution failed to induce depression of the second pulse (Fig. 5C), consistent with a role for Ca 2+ -dependent Trpm1 desensitization. A minor depression of the second pulse of both K + and LY was often observed, as is shown in the raw records and in the summary (Fig. 5E), and vesicle depletion or another inhibitory mechanism may play a role in this. Nevertheless, the difference in the time constant of paired pulse depression in normal Ca 2+, compared with either K + or LY in low Ca 2+, was highly significant (P < 0.01). Figure 5. Recovery of Trpm1 from desensitization limits the response frequency in ganglion cells A C, examples of the response of three different GCs to paired applications of LY and normal Ca 2+ (A), isotonic K + (B) and LY in Ca 2+ -free solution (C) to the OPL. The timing of drug application is indicated by dashes above each trace. Drugs were applied from a puffer pipette. In each case, the response to the first drug application is the average of all first application responses, while the second responses are individual traces. Paired-pulse depression (PPD) in GCs is observed when a presynaptic ON BC is depolarized with LY in normal Ca 2+, but not by K + or LY in Ca 2+ -free solution. D, summary of the downstream effect of Trpm1 desensitization on the GC responses to paired ON BC stimulation. Data were fitted with a single exponential with a time constant of 18.1 ± 2.4 s (n = 5 cells). E, summary data indicating that the recovery from PPD after 5 s in ganglion cell is significantly faster when BC desensitization is minimal (0 Ca 2+ ), and when mglur6 pathway involving Trpm1 is not activated (K + )(n = 6, P < 0.01). Trpm1 desensitization reduces the sustained component of release from both transient and sustained GCs Data presented here and in previous studies strongly support the idea that Trpm1 desensitization shapes the response of ON BCs to a sustained light stimulus. However, none of the previous studies address whether Trpm1 desensitization significantly shapes the downstream GC response. Because the effect of amacrine cell inhibitory feedback on GC EPSCs has been characterized extensively elsewhere (Lukasiewicz & Werblin, 1994; Zhang & Slaughter, 1995; Dong & Werblin, 1998; Roska et al. 1998), picrotoxin and strychnine were applied in these experiments to block feedback and isolate the effects of Trpm1 desensitization. We voltage clamped single GCs while applying LY with a fast-flow apparatus to the dendrites of BCs that were vertically aligned with the targeted GC. EPSCs generated by Trpm1 activation in ON BCs were typically composed of a transient and clearly defined steady-state component (Fig. 6A). The transient component of the GC EPSC decayed with a time constant of 323 ± 46 ms (n = 7cells)toasteady-statecomponent whose amplitude was approximately 25% of the peak (Fig. 6A). To test for a role of Trpm1 desensitization in shaping the EPSC, we exploited the requirement

9 J Physiol Role of Trpm1 desensitization 187 for extracellular Ca 2+ to support Trpm1 desensitization. Figure 6A compares the response to LY delivered in normal Ca 2+ (black trace) with the response to LY delivered to the same cell in a nominally Ca 2+ -free solution (grey trace). The rate of vesicle release during the peak response was not significantly different in 0 versus 2mMCa 2+ (P = 0.28; n = 6cells;Fig.6B, left).however,theaveragesteady state release rate measured 2 4 s after the onset of the EPSC was significantly increased when the extracellular Ca 2+ concentration at the BC dendrites was reduced (P = 0.01; n = 7cells;Fig.6B, right). When each 100 ms response interval is normalized to the peak response (Fig. 6C), it is clear that the rate of release was increased in low Ca 2+ at every time point beyond 1 s, consistent with the time course of Trpm1 desensitization. This is illustrated in the cumulative distribution of the number of vesicles released in each 100 ms interval during the 2 4 s window for seven cells, which indicated a highly significant difference between 2 mm and 0 mm Ca 2+ (P < 0.001, Kolmogorov Smirnov test; Fig. 6D). In conclusion, desensitization of Trpm1 limits neurotransmitterreleaseontogcs.itshouldbepointedoutthat the overall shape of the GC EPSC was not as dramatically altered by removing Ca 2+ as was the BC Trpm1 current itself. A likely explanation is that vesicle depletion also contributes to a reduction of the steady-state release rate. Conversely, pretreatment of BC dendrites with caffeine should initiate Trpm1 desensitization even before the channels open, leading to an overall reduction in Figure 6. Trpm1 desensitization decreases transmitter release at the synapse A, response of a GC to ON BC depolarization with LY in control (black trace) and in nominally Ca 2+ -free solution (grey trace). B, summary of the rate of vesicle release at peak and steady state in control and nominally Ca 2+ -free solution (P = 0.28, n = 6 left; P = 0.01, n = 8 right). C, analysis of the transmitter release when ON BC desensitization is reduced in 7 cells. Data are binned in 100 ms intervals and normalized to the peak; rate of release is significantly increased in nominally Ca 2+ -free solution (n = 7, P = 0.01). D, cumulative distribution of vesicles released in each 100 ms bin at the steady state (2 4 s after the peak) in the presence and absence of Ca 2+ (n = 7, P < 0.001). E, GC EPSC after ON BC was exposed to caffeine in the presence of L-AP4 and the response recovery after caffeine washout (grey trace). The rate of vesicle release by ON BCs was significantly reduced after caffeine application (n = 6, P < 0.02). F, summary graph comparing the ratio of vesicles released at steady state to peak when Ca 2+ concentration in BC was low and high, nominally free Ca 2+ and caffeine, respectively. Two groups of control experiments are plotted as each paired with a different experimental condition.

10 188 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol transmitter release during LY application. To test this possibility, a control EPSC was elicited in a GC, and then caffeine was applied to ON BC dendrites in the presence of L-AP4. After 60 s, re-application of LY revealed that caffeine strongly reduced vesicle release rate during both the peak and steady state components of the EPSC (P < 0.01; n = 6cells;Fig.6E). The effects of caffeine were reversible (Fig. 6E). Caffeine and low external Ca 2+ both significantly increased the steady state to peak ratio of release compared to 2 mm Ca 2+ alone (0 mm Ca 2+ ; P < 0.001, n = 6, caffeine; P < 0.02, n = 6, Fig.6F). Comparison of release rates measured under conditions designed to produce the maximum and minimum amount of Trpm1 desensitization reveals an approximately fourfold change in the rate of steady state transmitter release (caffeine; 463 ± 118 quanta s 1, n = 6, 0Ca 2+ ; 1712 ± 332 quanta s 1, n = 7, P < 0.01). These results indicate that Ca 2+ -dependent desensitization of Trpm1 has a profound influence on transmitter release from ON BC terminals, particularly at times greater than 1 second following initiation of the depolarizing stimulus. Figure 7. Trpm1 desensitization generates transient spike trains in ganglion cells A, example of a loose-patch recording from a GC in response to activation of the mglur6 signal cascade in ON BCs with LY Feedback inhibition was blocked in all of the experiments summarized in this figure. B, raster plot of spike number evoked by LY from nine consecutive trials. C, plot of the mean number of spikes (black continuous line) and SEM (grey dashed line) versus time for the cell shown in B. The data in A C are shown on the same x axis. D F, same cell as in A C but with reduced extracellular Ca 2+ in the OPL. G, summary histogram displaying spikes observed in each 500 ms bins in normal (black) and when Ca 2+ in the OPL was reduced (grey) (n = 15, P < 0.01). For each cell, spike rate was normalized to the bin with the maximum number of spikes, which occurred at the initiation of spike train activity. The sustained component of release revealed upon abolishing Trpm1 desensitization is sufficient to trigger GC action potentials Our results imply that desensitization of Trpm1 contributes to a more transient EPSC in GCs. Ultimately, however, it is the rate of action potential firing of GCs that is transmitted to the brain, and it is unclear whether a change in the amplitude of the steady state component of the EPSC will modulate action potential frequency. To examine this question more directly, we recorded from GCs in the loose patch configuration and monitored spike activity while applying LY to the dendrites of ON BCs. Picrotoxin and strychnine were added to the bath to isolate the effect of Trpm1 desensitization on spike rate. GC spike rate increased markedly in response to inactivationoftheonbcmglur6pathway,butthe increase was transient, as the spike rate nearly returned to baseline firing rate within 1 2 s after the start of the LY application (Fig. 7A). This is illustrated further in a raster plot of the number of spikes in nine successive trials (Fig. 7B), and in a plot of the mean number of spikes in those trials as a function of time (Fig. 7C). For each trial, the arrival of the first spike following the application of LY34145 was set to time (t) = 0. Subsequent spikes were plotted relative to the timing of the first spike and binned in 500 ms intervals. Lowering Ca 2+ in the region of the ON BC dendrites resulted in a more uniform GC firing rate throughout the application of LY (Fig. 7D, E and F). The GC firing rate during the first 500 ms of the response increased only slightly compared with normal Ca 2+ (2 Ca 2+ ; 16.0 ± 2.2 spikes s 1,in0Ca 2+ ; 19.4 ± 2.8 spikes s 1 ) and this increase was not statistically significant. The primary effect of lowering Ca 2+ on spike rate was observed approximately 1 s after the initiation of spiking (P < 0.01, n = 15, Fig. 7G), mirroring the time course of the increase in the amplitude of the EPSC described above. These results support the hypothesis that Trpm1 desensitization reduces the generation of action potentials in GCs in response to maintained illumination by decreasing the sustained component of the GC EPSC.

11 J Physiol Role of Trpm1 desensitization 189 Discussion Is there pathway specific desensitization in ON bipolar cells? Onegoalofthisstudywastomeasureandcompare desensitization parameters in functionally distinct populations of ON BCs. There is a general consensus that Trpm1 is required for ON BC function (Morgans et al. 2009; Shen et al. 2009; Koike et al. 2010), but whether ON BCs utilize different Trpm1 isoforms, depending on specific function, is not clear. In the salamander retina, there is strong evidence that the type of photoreceptor inputthatanonbcreceivesiswellcorrelatedwith the layer of termination of its axon, with rod-dominated cells terminating in layers 9 10, and cone-dominated cells in layers 6 7 (Wu et al. 2000; Pang et al. 2004; Zhang & Wu, 2009). Awatramani & Slaughter (2000) reported that ON BCs in these layers have strikingly different light response kinetics. The differences in kinetics may originate not from distinct properties of the postsynaptic cell, but rather from the kinetics of the presynaptic photoreceptor light response. Rods respond transiently to maintained illumination of moderate intensity (Fain et al. 1978; Attwell et al. 1987), and decreases in transmitter release rate during the light response would complicate interpretation of the kinetic behaviour of Trpm1. To avoid this concern, we have examined the kinetics of ON BC and GC EPSCs using a pharmacological approach rather than measuring light responses as others have done. In this way, we can measure synaptic Trpm1 currents using the same protocol in both rod and cone-driven ON BCs, bypassing the need for activation of the presynaptic cell. We observed desensitization in virtually every ON BC that was tested using this protocol, supporting the idea that differences in response kinetics of ON BCs are not due to intrinsic differences in the mglur6/trpm1 cascade, but are likely to be presynaptic. Our results also suggest that desensitization is present in ON BCs regardless of whether they receive input from rods or cones. This would seem to contradict the work of Berntson et al. (2004), who reported that desensitization of Trpm1 current is present in ON BCs that carry information from rod, but not cone pathways in mouse. However, in amphibian retina most, if not all ON BCs receive rod input (Lasansky, 1973; Hensley et al. 1993) and so even ON BCs that receive input predominantly from cones would therefore possess a desensitizing rod-driven component of the pharmacologically evoked response. Alternatively if Ca 2+ domains in mixed input ON BC dendrites are sufficiently large to allow for spread of Ca 2+ from dendrites contacting rods to nearby cone-contacting sites, then cross desensitization of rod and cone signals might occur. In summary, our experiments fail to observe a difference in the kinetic behaviour of Trpm1 currents between transient, predominantly rod-driven and sustained, predominantly cone-driven ON BCs. Microdomain organization of Ca 2+ signal to induce desensitization The dependence of desensitization upon recording conditions provide insight into the size of the domain associated with Ca 2+ -dependent Trpm1 desensitization. ACa 2+ signal associated with a single channel, within a few nanometers of the channel pore operates within a nanodomain (Chad & Eckert, 1984; Simon & Llinas, 1985; Oheim et al. 2006), while diffusion of Ca 2+ that extends beyond a few microns from the mouth of the channel is referred to as a microdomain (Llinas et al. 1995; Neher, 1998a,b; Parekh, 2008). Four independent lines of evidence strongly suggest that Ca 2+ required for Trpm1 desensitization is organized into microdomains rather than nanodomains. First, desensitization of the peak current is not observed under all conditions. As reported above, activation of approximately 20% or less of the maximum Trpm1 current produces little or no desensitization. The lack of desensitization under conditions when only a small fraction of channels are opened allows for the ON BC to reliably transmit the signal to GCs, when L-type Ca 2+ channels in axon terminals are at the foot of activation curve (Protti & Llano, 1998). If desensitization occurred at the level of single Trpm1 channel, then it should be proportional to the size of the current for all measurable current amplitudes. This conclusion assumes that varying mglur ligand concentration does not alter Trpm1 single channel conductance or open time but rather the mean open probability of the entire channel population. Second, keeping the open probability of Trpm1 constant with a saturating concentration of mglur antagonist, while varying the Ca 2+ driving force by clamping the cell at different voltages produced different amounts of desensitization (Nawy, 2004). Desensitization was greatest at 70 mv and progressively decreased as the holding potential was made more positive. Within the Trpm1 nanodomain, the Ca 2+ concentration should reach steady state within a few microseconds of channel opening (Llinas et al. 1992; Oheim et al. 2006). Therefore, if Ca 2+ was organized into nano-domain then desensitization should not vary regardless of the spatial extent of Ca 2+ flux. This finding further demonstrates the role of Ca 2+ is spatially localized to microdomains. Third, the Ca 2+ chelators EGTAandBAPTAbindCa 2+ equally at equilibrium, but EGTA binds 100-fold more slowly than BAPTA (Marty & Neher, 1985; Neher, 1998a). At equivalent concentrations, BAPTA and EGTA were found to be equally effective at blocking desensitization (DRs: 3 mm BAPTA, 0.29 ± 0.06,

12 190 T. Kaur and S. Nawy J Physiol n = 12, versus 3mM EGTA, 0.28 ± 0.04, n = 8, P = 0.9; 5mM BAPTA, 0.17 ± 0.11, n = 3, versus 5mM EGTA, 0.16 ± 0.06, n = 5, P = 0.11; 10 mm BAPTA, 0.10 ± 0.06, n = 5, versus 10 mm EGTA, 0.11 ± 0.03, n = 5, P = 0.11). DRs are progressively smaller as the buffering capacity increased which indicates that Ca 2+ ions must diffuse away from the channel pore to its target site to induce desensitization. Last, the slow rate at which desensitization proceeds following Trpm1 channel opening (τ = 1s) is also consistent with the idea that the Ca 2+ binding site is not within the nanodomain of the Trpm1 channel pore, as Ca 2+ -dependent activation of processes within a nano-domain proceed very rapidly. Furthermore, we find that the time course of recovery from Trpm1 desensitization is dependent on the Trpm1 open channel probability generated by application of different concentrations of LY (Fig. 3). A nano-domain model would predict that the rate of recovery from desensitization for a given Trpm1 channel should be independent of the total number of open channels, and instead should be governed by the kinetic properties of the channel itself. Instead, recovery from desensitization seems to reflect more global changes in Ca 2+ concentration, perhaps indicating the presence of a Ca 2+ sensor that is separate from the channel. In conclusion, both spatial and temporal properties of desensitization strongly indicate that the Ca 2+ binding site to trigger desensitization is not the channel itself, but a site which extends along the membrane within a microdomain. However, it is quite possible that the final target for desensitization is the channel itself (e.g. recruitment and activation of a kinase or phosphatase directly affecting the channel). Desensitization may prevent saturation caused by spatial summation Recovery from desensitization on the part of Trpm1 receptors imposes a limit on the rate of signalling between bipolar and ganglion cells. This would seem to be particularly advantageous for ON BCs that sample from a large number of photoreceptors, such as the tiger salamander (Lasansky, 1978). If the light stimulus impinging on the presynaptic photoreceptor pool is not homogenous, but instead covers only a portion of the pool, then strong stimulation of the Trpm1 channels that are postsynaptic to the stimulated photoreceptors could be sufficient to saturate the synaptic output of that of ON BCs. Desensitization should extend the operating range of the ON BC by preventing saturation due to spatial summation of inputs, essentially silencing the stimulated pool after the initial light signal has been passed downstream to the GC. It is reasonable for BCs from salamander retina, where there are multiple inputs impinging on the cell, but this seems to be a less effective strategy for cells where spatial summation is not a concern, such as midget BCs in primate retina, which receive input from only a single photoreceptor (Dowling & Boycott, 1966). We measured the time constant of recovery from desensitization to a saturating stimulus to be approximately 20 s, which seems like a very long time to reduce or eliminate synaptic input from photoreceptors. In lower vertebrates, BCs receive input from both rod and cone photoreceptors. The time required for rods to recover from bright light is also very long, in the order of 30 s or more, and this prolonged response to light is passed on to second-order horizontal cells (Attwell et al. 1987; Wu, 1987; Belgum & Copenhagen, 1988; Shiells & Falk, 1999). Prolonged depolarization in response to bright light could obscure responses from cone input to mixed ON BCs. Provided that the rise in Ca 2+ is localized sufficiently to desensitize rod input, rather than spreading to neighbouring cone contacts, as discussed above, desensitization could selectively reduce rod input, allowing the BC to respond to cone input. In mouse, rod and cone input are segregated, allowing for a separate channel of information flow when the rod pathway becomes saturated. Interestingly, desensitization is present in rod-driven BCs, but both onset and recovery from desensitization are rapid, in the order of milliseconds. Hence, it is possible that desensitization of Trpm1 is a mechanism used by lower vertebrates to separate rod and cone input. References Attwell D, Borges S, Wu SM & Wilson M (1987). Signal clipping by the rod output synapse. Nature 328, Awatramani GB & Slaughter MM (2000). Origin of transient and sustained responses in ganglion cells of the retina. JNeurosci20, Belgum JH & Copenhagen DR (1988). Synaptic transfer of rod signals to horizontal and bipolar cells in the retina of the toad (Bufo marinus). JPhysiol396, Berntson A, Smith RG & Taylor WR (2004). Postsynaptic calcium feedback between rods and rod bipolar cells in the mouse retina. Vis Neurosci 21, Chad JE & Eckert R (1984). Calcium domains associated with individual channels can account for anomalous voltage relations of CA-dependent responses. Biophys J 45, Chavez AE, Singer JH & Diamond JS (2006). Fast neurotransmitter release triggered by Ca influx through AMPA-type glutamate receptors. Nature 443, de la Villa P, Kurahashi T & Kaneko A (1995). L-glutamate-induced responses and cgmp-activated channels in three subtypes of retinal bipolar cells dissociated from the cat. JNeurosci15, Dhingra A, Jiang M, Wang TL, Lyubarsky A, Savchenko A, Bar-Yehuda T, Sterling P, Birnbaumer L & Vardi N (2002). Light response of retinal ON bipolar cells requires a specific splice variant of Gα o. JNeurosci22,

Action Potentials Are Required for the Lateral Transmission of Glycinergic Transient Inhibition in the Amphibian Retina

Action Potentials Are Required for the Lateral Transmission of Glycinergic Transient Inhibition in the Amphibian Retina The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 1998, 18(6):2301 2308 Action Potentials Are Required for the Lateral Transmission of Glycinergic Transient Inhibition in the Amphibian Retina Paul B. Cook, 1 Peter

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary Figure 1 The supralinear events evoked in CA3 pyramidal cells fulfill the criteria for NMDA spikes, exhibiting a threshold, sensitivity to NMDAR blockade, and all-or-none

More information

Temporal Contrast Adaptation in Salamander Bipolar Cells

Temporal Contrast Adaptation in Salamander Bipolar Cells The Journal of Neuroscience, December 1, 2001, 21(23):9445 9454 Temporal Contrast Adaptation in Salamander Bipolar Cells Fred Rieke Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle,

More information

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon?

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Supplementary information to: Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Maarten H. P. Kole & Greg J. Stuart Supplementary Fig. 1 Analysis of action potential (AP) threshold criteria. (a) Example

More information

Supporting Information

Supporting Information ATP from synaptic terminals and astrocytes regulates NMDA receptors and synaptic plasticity through PSD- 95 multi- protein complex U.Lalo, O.Palygin, A.Verkhratsky, S.G.N. Grant and Y. Pankratov Supporting

More information

Supporting Online Material for

Supporting Online Material for www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/317/5841/183/dc1 Supporting Online Material for Astrocytes Potentiate Transmitter Release at Single Hippocampal Synapses Gertrudis Perea and Alfonso Araque* *To whom

More information

Part 11: Mechanisms of Learning

Part 11: Mechanisms of Learning Neurophysiology and Information: Theory of Brain Function Christopher Fiorillo BiS 527, Spring 2012 042 350 4326, fiorillo@kaist.ac.kr Part 11: Mechanisms of Learning Reading: Bear, Connors, and Paradiso,

More information

Chapter 3 subtitles Action potentials

Chapter 3 subtitles Action potentials CELLULAR NEUROPHYSIOLOGY CONSTANCE HAMMOND Chapter 3 subtitles Action potentials Introduction (3:15) This third chapter explains the calcium current triggered by the arrival of the action potential in

More information

Problem Set 3 - Answers. -70mV TBOA

Problem Set 3 - Answers. -70mV TBOA Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology HST.131: Introduction to Neuroscience Course Director: Dr. David Corey HST 131/ Neuro 200 18 September 05 Explanation in text below graphs. Problem

More information

Sample Lab Report 1 from 1. Measuring and Manipulating Passive Membrane Properties

Sample Lab Report 1 from  1. Measuring and Manipulating Passive Membrane Properties Sample Lab Report 1 from http://www.bio365l.net 1 Abstract Measuring and Manipulating Passive Membrane Properties Biological membranes exhibit the properties of capacitance and resistance, which allow

More information

Neuroscience 201A (2016) - Problems in Synaptic Physiology

Neuroscience 201A (2016) - Problems in Synaptic Physiology Question 1: The record below in A shows an EPSC recorded from a cerebellar granule cell following stimulation (at the gap in the record) of a mossy fiber input. These responses are, then, evoked by stimulation.

More information

Chapter 3 Neurotransmitter release

Chapter 3 Neurotransmitter release NEUROPHYSIOLOGIE CELLULAIRE CONSTANCE HAMMOND Chapter 3 Neurotransmitter release In chapter 3, we proose 3 videos: Observation Calcium Channel, Ca 2+ Unitary and Total Currents Ca 2+ and Neurotransmitter

More information

Supplementary Information

Supplementary Information Hyperpolarization-activated cation channels inhibit EPSPs by interactions with M-type K + channels Meena S. George, L.F. Abbott, Steven A. Siegelbaum Supplementary Information Part 1: Supplementary Figures

More information

The ON and OFF Channels

The ON and OFF Channels The visual and oculomotor systems Peter H. Schiller, year 2006 The ON and OFF Channels Questions: 1. How are the ON and OFF channels created for the cones? 2. How are the ON and OFF channels created for

More information

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURE AND MAINTENANCE OF NEURONS (a) (b) Dendrites Cell body Initial segment collateral terminals (a) Diagrammatic representation of a neuron. The break in

More information

Action potential. Definition: an all-or-none change in voltage that propagates itself down the axon

Action potential. Definition: an all-or-none change in voltage that propagates itself down the axon Action potential Definition: an all-or-none change in voltage that propagates itself down the axon Action potential Definition: an all-or-none change in voltage that propagates itself down the axon Naturally

More information

Glycinergic synaptic inputs to bipolar cells in the salamander retina

Glycinergic synaptic inputs to bipolar cells in the salamander retina Keywords: Retina, Glycine, Synaptic current 7049 Journal of Physiology (1998), 506.3, pp. 731 744 731 Glycinergic synaptic inputs to bipolar cells in the salamander retina Bruce R. Maple and Samuel M.

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary Figure 1. Normal AMPAR-mediated fepsp input-output curve in CA3-Psen cdko mice. Input-output curves, which are plotted initial slopes of the evoked fepsp as function of the amplitude of the

More information

Na + K + pump. The beauty of the Na + K + pump. Cotransport. The setup Cotransport the result. Found along the plasma membrane of all cells.

Na + K + pump. The beauty of the Na + K + pump. Cotransport. The setup Cotransport the result. Found along the plasma membrane of all cells. The beauty of the Na + K + pump Na + K + pump Found along the plasma membrane of all cells. Establishes gradients, controls osmotic effects, allows for cotransport Nerve cells have a Na + K + pump and

More information

Chapter 5 subtitles GABAergic synaptic transmission

Chapter 5 subtitles GABAergic synaptic transmission CELLULAR NEUROPHYSIOLOGY CONSTANCE HAMMOND Chapter 5 subtitles GABAergic synaptic transmission INTRODUCTION (2:57) In this fifth chapter, you will learn how the binding of the GABA neurotransmitter to

More information

The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons.

The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons. 1 2 The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons. Type I afferents contact single inner hair cells to provide acoustic analysis as we know it. Type

More information

A biophysically realistic Model of the Retina

A biophysically realistic Model of the Retina A biophysically realistic Model of the Retina Melissa Louey Piotr Sokół Department of Mechanical Engineering Social and Psychological Sciences The University of Melbourne University College Utrecht Melbourne,

More information

Supplementary Figure 1. Basic properties of compound EPSPs at

Supplementary Figure 1. Basic properties of compound EPSPs at Supplementary Figure 1. Basic properties of compound EPSPs at hippocampal CA3 CA3 cell synapses. (a) EPSPs were evoked by extracellular stimulation of the recurrent collaterals and pharmacologically isolated

More information

The Visual System. Retinal Anatomy Dr. Casagrande February 2, Phone: Office: T2302 MCN

The Visual System. Retinal Anatomy Dr. Casagrande February 2, Phone: Office: T2302 MCN The Visual System Retinal Anatomy Dr. Casagrande February 2, 2004 Phone: 343-4538 Email: vivien.casagrande@mcmail.vanderbilt.edu Office: T2302 MCN Reading assignments and Good Web Sites Chapter 2 in Tovée,

More information

Synaptic Transmission: Ionic and Metabotropic

Synaptic Transmission: Ionic and Metabotropic Synaptic Transmission: Ionic and Metabotropic D. Purves et al. Neuroscience (Sinauer Assoc.) Chapters 5, 6, 7. C. Koch. Biophysics of Computation (Oxford) Chapter 4. J.G. Nicholls et al. From Neuron to

More information

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6 BIPN 140 Problem Set 6 1) The hippocampus is a cortical structure in the medial portion of the temporal lobe (medial temporal lobe in primates. a) What is the main function of the hippocampus? The hippocampus

More information

Astrocyte signaling controls spike timing-dependent depression at neocortical synapses

Astrocyte signaling controls spike timing-dependent depression at neocortical synapses Supplementary Information Astrocyte signaling controls spike timing-dependent depression at neocortical synapses Rogier Min and Thomas Nevian Department of Physiology, University of Berne, Bern, Switzerland

More information

File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References

File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References File name: Supplementary Data 1 Description: Summary datasheets showing the spatial

More information

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6 BIPN 140 Problem Set 6 1) Hippocampus is a cortical structure in the medial portion of the temporal lobe (medial temporal lobe in primates. a) What is the main function of the hippocampus? The hippocampus

More information

Supplementary Figure 1. SybII and Ceb are sorted to distinct vesicle populations in astrocytes. Nature Neuroscience: doi: /nn.

Supplementary Figure 1. SybII and Ceb are sorted to distinct vesicle populations in astrocytes. Nature Neuroscience: doi: /nn. Supplementary Figure 1 SybII and Ceb are sorted to distinct vesicle populations in astrocytes. (a) Exemplary images for cultured astrocytes co-immunolabeled with SybII and Ceb antibodies. SybII accumulates

More information

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Module 11.1 Overview of the Nervous System (Figures 11.1-11.3) A. The nervous system controls our perception and experience

More information

TEMPORAL PRECISION OF SENSORY RESPONSES Berry and Meister, 1998

TEMPORAL PRECISION OF SENSORY RESPONSES Berry and Meister, 1998 TEMPORAL PRECISION OF SENSORY RESPONSES Berry and Meister, 1998 Today: (1) how can we measure temporal precision? (2) what mechanisms enable/limit precision? A. 0.1 pa WHY SHOULD YOU CARE? average rod

More information

Introduction to Neurobiology

Introduction to Neurobiology Biology 240 General Zoology Introduction to Neurobiology Nervous System functions: communication of information via nerve signals integration and processing of information control of physiological and

More information

Quantal Analysis Problems

Quantal Analysis Problems Quantal Analysis Problems 1. Imagine you had performed an experiment on a muscle preparation from a Drosophila larva. In this experiment, intracellular recordings were made from an identified muscle fibre,

More information

BIPN100 F15 Human Physiology 1 Lecture 3. Synaptic Transmission p. 1

BIPN100 F15 Human Physiology 1 Lecture 3. Synaptic Transmission p. 1 BIPN100 F15 Human Physiology 1 Lecture 3. Synaptic Transmission p. 1 Terms you should know: synapse, neuromuscular junction (NMJ), pre-synaptic, post-synaptic, synaptic cleft, acetylcholine (ACh), acetylcholine

More information

Sensitivity and Adaptation in the Retina

Sensitivity and Adaptation in the Retina Sensitivity and Adaptation in the Retina Visual transduction single photon sensitivity dark current rhodopsin Ca ++ vs cgmp as the messenger amplification Operating range of vision saturation, threshold,

More information

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST)

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Electrophysiological Properties and Their Response to Serotonin DONALD G. RAINNIE a Harvard Medical School and Department of Psychiatry, Brockton

More information

MCB MIDTERM EXAM #1 MONDAY MARCH 3, 2008 ANSWER KEY

MCB MIDTERM EXAM #1 MONDAY MARCH 3, 2008 ANSWER KEY MCB 160 - MIDTERM EXAM #1 MONDAY MARCH 3, 2008 ANSWER KEY Name ID# Instructions: -Only tests written in pen will be regarded -Please submit a written request indicating where and why you deserve more points

More information

Ultrastructural Contributions to Desensitization at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber to Granule Cell Synapse

Ultrastructural Contributions to Desensitization at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber to Granule Cell Synapse Ultrastructural Contributions to Desensitization at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber to Granule Cell Synapse Matthew A.Xu-Friedman and Wade G. Regehr Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston,

More information

Neurons. Pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein. The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons.

Neurons. Pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein. The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons. Neurons Pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein. The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons. MBL, Woods Hole R Cheung MSc Bioelectronics: PGEE11106 1 Neuron

More information

Neurons! John A. White Dept. of Bioengineering

Neurons! John A. White Dept. of Bioengineering Neurons! John A. White Dept. of Bioengineering john.white@utah.edu What makes neurons different from cardiomyocytes? Morphological polarity Transport systems Shape and function of action potentials Neuronal

More information

(Received 4 July 1977)

(Received 4 July 1977) J. Phyaiol. (1978), 276, pp. 299-310 299 With 7 text-figure8 Printed in Great Britain EFFECTS OF PICROTOXIN AND STRYCHNINE ON RABBIT RETINAL GANGLION CELLS: CHANGES IN CENTRE SURROUND RECEPTIVE FIELDS

More information

2) Put these in order: I repolarization II- depolarization of action potential III- rest IV- depolarization to threshold

2) Put these in order: I repolarization II- depolarization of action potential III- rest IV- depolarization to threshold 1) During an action potential, a membrane cannot depolarize above: a) The equilibrium potential of sodium b) The equilibrium potential of potassium c) Zero d) The threshold value e) There is no limit.

More information

Neurons: Structure and communication

Neurons: Structure and communication Neurons: Structure and communication http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/gall1.html Common Components of a Neuron Dendrites Input, receives neurotransmitters Soma Processing, decision Axon Transmits

More information

MCB 160 MIDTERM EXAM 1 KEY Wednesday, February 22, 2012

MCB 160 MIDTERM EXAM 1 KEY Wednesday, February 22, 2012 MCB 160 MIDTERM EXAM 1 KEY Wednesday, February 22, 2012 Name: SID: Instructions: - Write in pen. (No regrades if written in pencil.) - Write name on top of each page. - Clearly label any illustrations.

More information

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open increase decrease Cell communication Gated ion channels Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open Triggered by: potential change, chemical binding, temperature change, stretching 1 Voltage-Gated

More information

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Voltage-Gated Na + Channel. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Voltage-Gated Na + Channel. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open increase decrease Cell communication Gated ion channels Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open Voltage-Gated Na + Channel Activation gate ECF Triggered by: change, chemical binding, temperature

More information

3) Most of the organelles in a neuron are located in the A) dendritic region. B) axon hillock. C) axon. D) cell body. E) axon terminals.

3) Most of the organelles in a neuron are located in the A) dendritic region. B) axon hillock. C) axon. D) cell body. E) axon terminals. Chapter 48 Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Multiple-Choice Questions 1) A simple nervous system A) must include chemical senses, mechanoreception, and vision. B) includes a minimum of 12 ganglia. C) has

More information

What effect would an AChE inhibitor have at the neuromuscular junction?

What effect would an AChE inhibitor have at the neuromuscular junction? CASE 4 A 32-year-old woman presents to her primary care physician s office with difficulty chewing food. She states that when she eats certain foods that require a significant amount of chewing (meat),

More information

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Overview: Lines of Communication Chapter 8 Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Fig. 8- The cone snail kills prey with venom that disables neurons Neurons are nerve s that transfer information within the body

More information

Supporting Online Material for

Supporting Online Material for www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/312/5779/1533/dc1 Supporting Online Material for Long-Term Potentiation of Neuron-Glia Synapses Mediated by Ca 2+ - Permeable AMPA Receptors Woo-Ping Ge, Xiu-Juan Yang,

More information

Ameen Alsaras. Ameen Alsaras. Mohd.Khatatbeh

Ameen Alsaras. Ameen Alsaras. Mohd.Khatatbeh 9 Ameen Alsaras Ameen Alsaras Mohd.Khatatbeh Nerve Cells (Neurons) *Remember: The neural cell consists of: 1-Cell body 2-Dendrites 3-Axon which ends as axon terminals. The conduction of impulse through

More information

Portions from Chapter 6 CHAPTER 7. The Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses. Chapter 7 Outline. and Supporting Cells

Portions from Chapter 6 CHAPTER 7. The Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses. Chapter 7 Outline. and Supporting Cells CHAPTER 7 The Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses Chapter 7 Outline Neurons and Supporting Cells Activity in Axons The Synapse Acetylcholine as a Neurotransmitter Monoamines as Neurotransmitters Other

More information

Slow Na Inactivation and Variance Adaptation in Salamander Retinal Ganglion Cells

Slow Na Inactivation and Variance Adaptation in Salamander Retinal Ganglion Cells 1506 The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2003 23(4):1506 1516 Slow Na Inactivation and Variance Adaptation in Salamander Retinal Ganglion Cells Kerry J. Kim and Fred Rieke Department of Physiology

More information

Chapter 6 subtitles postsynaptic integration

Chapter 6 subtitles postsynaptic integration CELLULAR NEUROPHYSIOLOGY CONSTANCE HAMMOND Chapter 6 subtitles postsynaptic integration INTRODUCTION (1:56) This sixth and final chapter deals with the summation of presynaptic currents. Glutamate and

More information

Neurotransmitter Systems II Receptors. Reading: BCP Chapter 6

Neurotransmitter Systems II Receptors. Reading: BCP Chapter 6 Neurotransmitter Systems II Receptors Reading: BCP Chapter 6 Neurotransmitter Systems Normal function of the human brain requires an orderly set of chemical reactions. Some of the most important chemical

More information

Stratum-by-stratum projection of light response attributes by retinal bipolar cells of Ambystoma

Stratum-by-stratum projection of light response attributes by retinal bipolar cells of Ambystoma J Physiol 558.1 (2004) pp 249 262 249 Stratum-by-stratum projection of light response attributes by retinal bipolar cells of Ambystoma Ji-Jie Pang, Fan Gao and Samuel M. Wu Cullen Eye Institute, Baylor

More information

Structure of a Neuron:

Structure of a Neuron: Structure of a Neuron: At the dendrite the incoming signals arrive (incoming currents) At the soma current are finally integrated. At the axon hillock action potential are generated if the potential crosses

More information

5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons

5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons 5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons AXON ION GRADIENTS ACTION POTENTIAL (axon conduction) GRADED POTENTIAL (cell-cell communication at synapse) SYNAPSE STRUCTURE & FUNCTION NEURAL INTEGRATION CNS

More information

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Chapter 8 Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Eighth Edition Overview: Lines of Communication The cone snail kills prey with venom that disables neurons Neurons are nerve

More information

What is Anatomy and Physiology?

What is Anatomy and Physiology? Introduction BI 212 BI 213 BI 211 Ecosystems Organs / organ systems Cells Organelles Communities Tissues Molecules Populations Organisms Campbell et al. Figure 1.4 Introduction What is Anatomy and Physiology?

More information

Electrophysiology. General Neurophysiology. Action Potentials

Electrophysiology. General Neurophysiology. Action Potentials 5 Electrophysiology Cochlear implants should aim to reproduce the coding of sound in the auditory system as closely as possible, for best sound perception. The cochlear implant is in part the result of

More information

The action potential travels down both branches because each branch is a typical axon with voltage dependent Na + and K+ channels.

The action potential travels down both branches because each branch is a typical axon with voltage dependent Na + and K+ channels. BIO 360 - MIDTERM FALL 2018 This is an open book, open notes exam. PLEASE WRITE YOUR NAME ON EACH SHEET. Read each question carefully and answer as well as you can. Point values are shown at the beginning

More information

Correlation between Membrane Potential Responses and Tentacle Movement in the Dinoflagellate Noctiluca miliaris

Correlation between Membrane Potential Responses and Tentacle Movement in the Dinoflagellate Noctiluca miliaris ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE 21: 131 138 (2004) 2004 Zoological Society of Japan Correlation between Membrane Potential Responses and Tentacle Movement in the Dinoflagellate Noctiluca miliaris Kazunori Oami* Institute

More information

Lecture 14. Insect nerve system (II)

Lecture 14. Insect nerve system (II) Lecture 14. Insect nerve system (II) Structures (Anatomy) Cells Anatomy How NS functions Signal transduction Signal transmission Overview More on neurons: ions, ion channel, ligand receptor Signal transduction:

More information

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire The Chemical Synapse The most common type of synapse used for signal transmission in the central

More information

The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons

The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons Dieter Jaeger Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322 Key words: Abstract: rat, slice, whole cell, dynamic current

More information

NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES 34.3

NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES 34.3 NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES 34.3 NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES Neurons communicate with other neurons or target cells at synapses. Chemical synapse: a very narrow

More information

Nervous System. Nervous system cells. Transmission of a signal 2/27/2015. Neuron

Nervous System. Nervous system cells. Transmission of a signal 2/27/2015. Neuron Nervous System 2007-2008 signal direction Neuron a nerve cell Nervous system cells dendrites axon cell body Structure fits function many entry points for signal one path out transmits signal signal direction

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION doi:10.1038/nature10776 Supplementary Information 1: Influence of inhibition among blns on STDP of KC-bLN synapses (simulations and schematics). Unconstrained STDP drives network activity to saturation

More information

Parallel pathways in the retina

Parallel pathways in the retina Retinal origins of parallel pathways in the primate visual system Wednesday, September 23, 2015 Sherry, 2002 1 Parallel pathways in the retina Several different images of the outside world are sent simultaneously

More information

Synaptic plasticityhippocampus. Neur 8790 Topics in Neuroscience: Neuroplasticity. Outline. Synaptic plasticity hypothesis

Synaptic plasticityhippocampus. Neur 8790 Topics in Neuroscience: Neuroplasticity. Outline. Synaptic plasticity hypothesis Synaptic plasticityhippocampus Neur 8790 Topics in Neuroscience: Neuroplasticity Outline Synaptic plasticity hypothesis Long term potentiation in the hippocampus How it s measured What it looks like Mechanisms

More information

Synaptic Integration

Synaptic Integration Synaptic Integration 3 rd January, 2017 Touqeer Ahmed PhD Atta-ur-Rahman School of Applied Biosciences National University of Sciences and Technology Excitatory Synaptic Actions Excitatory Synaptic Action

More information

3.E.2 Continued. This is the essential knowledge statement from the curriculum framework. Detect---process--- response

3.E.2 Continued. This is the essential knowledge statement from the curriculum framework. Detect---process--- response Nervous System: Part III What Happens at a Synapse? 3.E. Continued Animals have nervous systems that detect external and internal signals, transmit and integrate information, and produce responses. This

More information

Thursday, January 22, Nerve impulse

Thursday, January 22, Nerve impulse Nerve impulse Transmembrane Potential caused by ions moving through cell membrane at different rates Two main ions of concern Na + - Sodium K + - potassium Cell membrane not freely permeable therefore

More information

QUIZ/TEST REVIEW NOTES SECTION 7 NEUROPHYSIOLOGY [THE SYNAPSE AND PHARMACOLOGY]

QUIZ/TEST REVIEW NOTES SECTION 7 NEUROPHYSIOLOGY [THE SYNAPSE AND PHARMACOLOGY] QUIZ/TEST REVIEW NOTES SECTION 7 NEUROPHYSIOLOGY [THE SYNAPSE AND PHARMACOLOGY] Learning Objectives: Explain how neurons communicate stimulus intensity Explain how action potentials are conducted along

More information

Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex

Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex Koji Yashiro, Thorfinn T. Riday, Kathryn H. Condon, Adam C. Roberts, Danilo R. Bernardo, Rohit Prakash, Richard J. Weinberg, Michael

More information

Supplementary Information. Errors in the measurement of voltage activated ion channels. in cell attached patch clamp recordings

Supplementary Information. Errors in the measurement of voltage activated ion channels. in cell attached patch clamp recordings Supplementary Information Errors in the measurement of voltage activated ion channels in cell attached patch clamp recordings Stephen R. Williams 1,2 and Christian Wozny 2 1 Queensland Brain Institute,

More information

Neurobiology: The nerve cell. Principle and task To use a nerve function model to study the following aspects of a nerve cell:

Neurobiology: The nerve cell. Principle and task To use a nerve function model to study the following aspects of a nerve cell: Principle and task To use a nerve function model to study the following aspects of a nerve cell: INTRACELLULAR POTENTIAL AND ACTION POTENTIAL Comparison between low and high threshold levels Comparison

More information

Brief presynaptic bursts evoke synapse-specific retrograde inhibition mediated by endogenous cannabinoids

Brief presynaptic bursts evoke synapse-specific retrograde inhibition mediated by endogenous cannabinoids Brief presynaptic bursts evoke synapse-specific retrograde inhibition mediated by endogenous cannabinoids Solange P Brown 1 3,Stephan D Brenowitz 1,3 & Wade G Regehr 1 Many types of neurons can release

More information

Bursting dynamics in the brain. Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST

Bursting dynamics in the brain. Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST Bursting dynamics in the brain Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST Tonic and phasic activity A neuron is said to exhibit a tonic activity when it fires a series of single action potentials

More information

FIRST MIDTERM EXAM October 18, 2011 BILD2

FIRST MIDTERM EXAM October 18, 2011 BILD2 FIRST MIDTERM EXAM October 18, 2011 BILD2 WRITE YOUR NAME ON ALL 6 PAGES. ANSWER ALL 10 QUESTIONS (100 POINTS). CONFINE YOUR ANSWERS TO THE SPACE ALLOWED. If you would like to write on the back of the

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION doi: 1.138/nature6416 Supplementary Notes Spine Ca 2+ signals produced by glutamate uncaging We imaged uncaging-evoked [Ca 2+ ] transients in neurons loaded with a green Ca 2+ - sensitive indicator (G;

More information

postsynaptic), and each plasma membrane has a hemichannel, sometimes called a connexon)

postsynaptic), and each plasma membrane has a hemichannel, sometimes called a connexon) The Retina The retina is the part of the CNS that sends visual information from the eye to the brain. It very efficient at capturing and relaying as much visual information as possible, under a great range

More information

Chapter 2: Cellular Mechanisms and Cognition

Chapter 2: Cellular Mechanisms and Cognition Chapter 2: Cellular Mechanisms and Cognition MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. Two principles about neurons were defined by Ramón y Cajal. The principle of connectional specificity states that, whereas the principle

More information

Modeling Depolarization Induced Suppression of Inhibition in Pyramidal Neurons

Modeling Depolarization Induced Suppression of Inhibition in Pyramidal Neurons Modeling Depolarization Induced Suppression of Inhibition in Pyramidal Neurons Peter Osseward, Uri Magaram Department of Neuroscience University of California, San Diego La Jolla, CA 92092 possewar@ucsd.edu

More information

Dep. Control Time (min)

Dep. Control Time (min) aa Control Dep. RP 1s 1 mv 2s 1 mv b % potentiation of IPSP 2 15 1 5 Dep. * 1 2 3 4 Time (min) Supplementary Figure 1. Rebound potentiation of IPSPs in PCs. a, IPSPs recorded with a K + gluconate pipette

More information

Applied Neuroscience. Conclusion of Science Honors Program Spring 2017

Applied Neuroscience. Conclusion of Science Honors Program Spring 2017 Applied Neuroscience Conclusion of Science Honors Program Spring 2017 Review Circle whichever is greater, A or B. If A = B, circle both: I. A. permeability of a neuronal membrane to Na + during the rise

More information

Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche

Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche Sean J. Markwardt, Cristina V. Dieni, Jacques I. Wadiche & Linda Overstreet-Wadiche Supplementary Methods. Animals We used hemizygous

More information

Spatial Distribution of Calcium Entry Evoked by Single Action Potentials within the Presynaptic Active Zone

Spatial Distribution of Calcium Entry Evoked by Single Action Potentials within the Presynaptic Active Zone Spatial Distribution of Calcium Entry Evoked by Single Action Potentials within the Presynaptic Active Zone Elliot S. Wachman,, Robert E. Poage,, Joel R. Stiles, Daniel L. Farkas,, and Stephen D. Meriney

More information

Nature Methods: doi: /nmeth Supplementary Figure 1. Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse.

Nature Methods: doi: /nmeth Supplementary Figure 1. Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse. Supplementary Figure 1 Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse. a. Probability distribution of firing rates across the population (notice log scale) in our data. The range of firing rates is wide but

More information

BIONB/BME/ECE 4910 Neuronal Simulation Assignments 1, Spring 2013

BIONB/BME/ECE 4910 Neuronal Simulation Assignments 1, Spring 2013 BIONB/BME/ECE 4910 Neuronal Simulation Assignments 1, Spring 2013 Tutorial Assignment Page Due Date Week 1/Assignment 1: Introduction to NIA 1 January 28 The Membrane Tutorial 9 Week 2/Assignment 2: Passive

More information

Division Ave. High School AP Biology. cell body. signal direction

Division Ave. High School AP Biology. cell body. signal direction signal direction Nervous system cells Neuron a nerve cell dendrites myelin sheath axon cell body dendrite cell body axon Structure fits function many entry points for signal one path out transmits signal

More information

Intro. Comp. NeuroSci. Ch. 9 October 4, The threshold and channel memory

Intro. Comp. NeuroSci. Ch. 9 October 4, The threshold and channel memory 9.7.4 The threshold and channel memory The action potential has a threshold. In figure the area around threshold is expanded (rectangle). A current injection that does not reach the threshold does not

More information

Biology Animal Physiology Fall Midterm 1

Biology Animal Physiology Fall Midterm 1 Name: Biology 449 - Animal Physiology Fall 2010 Fill in your scantron form as follows: Midterm 1 Write and bubble in your name in the upper left (last name first). Sign your form on the upper right. By

More information

OPTO 5320 VISION SCIENCE I

OPTO 5320 VISION SCIENCE I OPTO 5320 VISION SCIENCE I Monocular Sensory Processes of Vision: Color Vision Mechanisms of Color Processing . Neural Mechanisms of Color Processing A. Parallel processing - M- & P- pathways B. Second

More information

Excitatory Synaptic Transmission in the Inner Retina: Paired Recordings of Bipolar Cells and Neurons of the Ganglion Cell Layer

Excitatory Synaptic Transmission in the Inner Retina: Paired Recordings of Bipolar Cells and Neurons of the Ganglion Cell Layer The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 1998, 18(12):4500 4510 Excitatory Synaptic Transmission in the Inner Retina: Paired Recordings of Bipolar Cells and Neurons of the Ganglion Cell Layer Ko Matsui, Nobutake

More information

Dark and light adaptation: a job that is accomplished mainly in the retina

Dark and light adaptation: a job that is accomplished mainly in the retina Dark and light adaptation: a job that is accomplished mainly in the retina Dark adaptation: recovery in darkness (of sensitivity) and photoreceptor pigment. Light adaptation: The ability of the visual

More information

Predictive Features of Persistent Activity Emergence in Regular Spiking and Intrinsic Bursting Model Neurons

Predictive Features of Persistent Activity Emergence in Regular Spiking and Intrinsic Bursting Model Neurons Emergence in Regular Spiking and Intrinsic Bursting Model Neurons Kyriaki Sidiropoulou, Panayiota Poirazi* Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (IMBB), Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas

More information

Enhancement of synaptic transmission by cyclic AMP modulation of presynaptic I h channels. Vahri Beaumont and Robert S. Zucker

Enhancement of synaptic transmission by cyclic AMP modulation of presynaptic I h channels. Vahri Beaumont and Robert S. Zucker Enhancement of synaptic transmission by cyclic AMP modulation of presynaptic I h channels Vahri Beaumont and Robert S. Zucker Background I h channels discovered in 1976 (Noma A. and Irisawa H.) Voltage-gated

More information