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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 20, 2003, 23(20):7621-7629
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Developmental Modulation of Retinal Wave Dynamics: Shedding Light on the GABA Saga
Evelyne Sernagor,1
Carol Young,1 and
Stephen J. Eglen2
1School of Neurology, Neurobiology, and
Psychiatry, Medical Sciences, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle
upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, United Kingdom, and 2Department of
Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis,
Missouri 63110
Embryonic spontaneous activity, in the form of propagating waves, is
crucial for refining visual connections. To study what aspects of this
correlated activity are instructive, we must first understand how their
dynamics change with development and what factors trigger their disappearance
after birth. Here we report that in the turtle retina, GABA, rather than
glutamate and acetylcholine, influences developmental changes in wave
dynamics. Using calcium imaging of the ganglion cell layer, we report how
waves switch from fast and broad, when they emerge, to slow and narrow a few
days before hatching, coinciding with the emergence of excitatory
GABAA receptor-mediated activity. Around hatching, waves gradually
become stationary patches, whereas GABAA shifts from excitatory to
inhibitory, coinciding with the upregulation of the cotransporter KCC2,
suggesting that changes in intracellular chloride underlie the shift.
Dark-rearing from hatching causes correlated spontaneous activity to persist,
whereas GABAA responses remain excitatory, and KCC2 expression is
weaker. We conclude that GABA plays an important regulatory role during the
maturation of retinal neural activity. Using a simple and elegant mechanism,
namely the switch from excitatory to inhibitory, GABAA
receptor-mediated activity is necessary and sufficient to cause retinal waves
to stop propagating, ultimately leading to the disappearance of correlated
spontaneous activity. Moreover, our results suggest that visual experience
modulates the GABAergic switch.
Key words: retinal waves; retinal development; GABA; calcium imaging; dark-rearing; visual experience; spontaneous activity
Received Dec. 27, 2002;
revised Jun. 24, 2003;
accepted Jul. 2, 2003.
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