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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2001, 21(21):8664-8671
Mechanisms Underlying Developmental Changes in the Firing
Patterns of ON and OFF Retinal Ganglion Cells during Refinement of
their Central Projections
Karen L.
Myhr1,
Peter
D.
Lukasiewicz1, 2, and
Rachel O. L.
Wong1
Departments of 1 Anatomy and Neurobiology and
2 Ophthalmology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Patterned neuronal activity is implicated in the refinement of
connectivity during development. Calcium-imaging studies of the
immature ferret visual system demonstrated previously that functionally
separate ON and OFF retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) develop distinct
temporal patterns of spontaneous activity as their axonal projections
undergo refinement. OFF RGCs become spontaneously more active compared
with ON cells, resulting in a decrease in synchronous activity between
these cell types. This change in ON and OFF activity patterns is
suitable for driving the activity-dependent refinement of their axonal
projections. Here, we used whole-cell and perforated-patch recording
techniques to elucidate the mechanisms that underlie the developmental
alteration in the ON and OFF RGC activity patterns. First, we show that
before the refinement period, ON and OFF RGCs have similar spike
patterns; however, during the period of segregation, OFF RGCs
demonstrate significantly higher spike rates relative to ON cells. With
increasing age, OFF cells require less depolarization to reach their
action potential threshold and fire more spikes in response to current
injection compared with ON cells. In addition, spontaneous postsynaptic
currents and potentials are greater in magnitude in OFF cells than ON
cells. In contrast, before axonal refinement, there are no differences in the intrinsic excitability or synaptic drive onto ON and OFF cells.
Together, our results show that developmental changes in ON and OFF RGC
excitability and in the strength of their synaptic drives act together
to reshape the spike patterns of these cells in a manner appropriate
for the refinement of their connectivity.
Key words:
developing retina; activity-dependent segregation; ferret
visual system; spike patterns; action potential threshold; spontaneous
activity; ON-center ganglion cells; OFF-center ganglion cells
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21218664-08$05.00/0
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