Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 9, 815-827, Copyright © 1989 by Society for Neuroscience
Effects of background illumination on the horizontal cell responses in the tiger salamander retina
XL Yang and SM Wu
Cullen Eye Institute, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030.
Synaptic transmission between photoreceptors and horizontal cells (HCs) was
studied in the flat-mounted isolated retinas of the tiger salamander.
Background illumination expedited the rise time of the HC light response,
and the HC response rise time (HCRRT) reached steady state about 2 sec
after the onset of the background illumination. The change in HCRRT is
probably responsible for the background-induced enhancement of the HC
responses to short light stimuli. The amplitude of the HC responses to 100
msec light steps in the presence of background illumination was 2-5 times
larger than that measured under dark-adapted conditions. Background
illumination exerted little effect on the response rise time in cones and
bipolar cells, and thus it caused no significant response enhancement in
those cells. The background-induced change in HCRRT correlated closely with
the rod voltage but not with the HC voltage. These results suggest that the
background-induced change in HCRRT is probably mediated by postsynaptic
events in HCs because no significant time course change is observed in
photoreceptors and bipolar cells (which share the same synapses with the
HCs). A suppressive rod action on the cone inputs in HCs may be responsible
for modulating the HCRRT. By shortening the HCRRT, background illumination
regulates the frequency response of the photoreceptor-HC synapse and alters
the capacity of spatial resolution of retinal bipolar cells.