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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 1998, 18(11):4155-4165
Direct Participation of Starburst Amacrine Cells in Spontaneous
Rhythmic Activities in the Developing Mammalian Retina
Z. Jimmy
Zhou
Departments of Physiology and Biophysics and Ophthalmology,
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas
72205
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ABSTRACT |
Spontaneous, rhythmic waves of excitation in the developing
mammalian retina play a critical role in the formation of precise neuronal connectivity in the visual system. However, it is not known
what circuits in the retina are responsible for the production of these
waves. Using patch-clamp recordings in the whole-mount neonatal rabbit
retina, this study reports that the displaced starburst amacrine cell,
a unique cholinergic interneuron in the ganglion cell layer of the
retina, undergoes rhythmic bursts of membrane depolarization with a
frequency and duration similar to those of spontaneous retinal waves.
Simultaneous patch-clamp recordings from pairs of neighboring starburst
and ganglion cells show that the rhythmic activity in starburst cells
is closely correlated with that in ganglion cells, and that the
excitation in both cell types is most likely driven by synaptic input.
However, in contrast to ganglion cells, displaced starburst cells
usually do not generate spontaneous somatic action potentials. Instead, they seem to use subthreshold potentials (at least at the soma) to
mediate the rhythmic excitation. The results suggest that acetylcholine is likely released rhythmically in the developing retina. Thus, starburst amacrine cells form the first identified network of retinal
interneurons that directly participate in spontaneous rhythmic
activities in the developing retina.
Key words:
cholinergic amacrine cell; ganglion cell; mammalian
retina; rhythmic excitation; whole-cell patch clamp; visual
development
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INTRODUCTION |
The development of specific synaptic
circuitry in the CNS often requires the presence of neuronal electric
activity (Constantine-Paton et al., 1990 ; Kalil, 1990 ; Cook, 1991 ;
Bodnarenko and Chalupa, 1993 ; Goodman and Shatz, 1993 ; Katz and Shatz,
1996 ). In the developing vertebrate retina, synchronized bursts of
spontaneous action potentials in ganglion cells (Masland, 1977 ; Maffei
and Galli-Resta, 1990 ; Meister et al., 1991 ; Sernagor and Grzywacz,
1996 ) are believed to play a critical role in the formation of precise
neuronal connectivity in the visual system (Cline, 1991 ; Goodman and
Shatz, 1993 ; Wong, 1993 ; Sernagor and Grzywacz, 1996 ; Shatz, 1996 ; Wong
and Oakley, 1996 ). However, the mechanism by which spontaneous
activities are generated in the retina is still unknown. Recent studies
suggest that correlated spikes in ganglion cells of the immature
mammalian retina may be driven, at least in part, by neurotransmitter
input (Feller et al., 1996 ). It seems that a specific retinal network, most likely involving both retinal interneurons and ganglion cells (Wong et al., 1995 ; Feller et al., 1996 ), may participate in mediating the spontaneous activity, although very little is known about the
circuitry or the physiology of this network. To understand how
interactions within such a network may mediate spontaneous waves of
excitation, it is essential to identify major types of neurons, in
addition to ganglion cells, that participate in the circuitry. It is
also important to understand the function of these identified
interneurons.
In the developing ferret retina, correlated waves of excitation occur
spontaneously before eye opening (Meister et al., 1991 ; Wong et al.,
1995 ; Feller et al., 1996 ). These spontaneous activities are most
prominent during the period when eye-specific layers in the lateral
geniculate nucleus are being formed (Wong et al., 1993 , 1995 ; for waves
at a later stage, see Wong and Oakley, 1996 ). At this early stage of
visual development, only conventional synapses are seen in the inner
plexiform layer (IPL) of the retina, suggesting that the major synaptic
input to ganglion cells is from amacrine cells, because ribbon synapses
at bipolar cell synaptic terminals are not yet developed (Greiner and
Weidman, 1981 ). The electrophysiological properties of amacrine cells
during development are so far unclear. Earlier attempts of
intracellular recordings failed to show any rhythmic changes in the
membrane potential of amacrine cells in the developing ferret retina
(Wong et al., 1993 ). More recently, optical imaging from amacrine cells
(identified on the basis of their soma size and location in the
developing ferret retina) have shown that some of these cells undergo
oscillations in intracellular calcium concentration (Wong et al., 1995 ;
Stellwagen et al., 1997 ).
Of particular interest is a type of amacrine cell named "starburst"
(Famiglietti, 1983 ), which is the only cholinergic cell type and the
only amacrine cell using an excitatory neurotransmitter in the adult
mammalian retina (for review, see Masland and Tauchi, 1986 ) (Vaney
1990 ; Wässle and Boycott, 1991 ). They exist in the IPL as two
mirror symmetric populations, each ramifying in one of the two narrow
strata in the IPL (Hayden et al., 1980 ; Vaney et al., 1981 ;
Famiglietti, 1983 , 1985 ). The cells stratifying near the proximal
margin (sublamina b) of the IPL have their cell bodies displaced to the
ganglion cell layer and are called displaced starburst amacrine
cells.
Recent calcium imaging studies of the immature ferret retina show that
the propagation of spontaneous retinal waves in the ganglion cell layer
requires cholinergic synaptic transmission (Feller et al., 1996 ),
indicating that starburst cells play an important role. Patch-clamp
recordings in rabbit retinal slices (Zhou and Fain, 1996 ) also show
that displaced starburst amacrine cells undergo a surprising transition
in their membrane excitability (from being able to generate spikes to
nonspiking) just around eye opening, a time when correlated retinal
waves also disappear (Wong et al., 1993 ). Thus, it seems possible that
starburst cells play a crucial role in the generation and, perhaps,
also the termination of spontaneous waves in the developing retina. An
important task at this point is to prove whether starburst cells
directly participate in rhythmic waves of excitation in the developing
retina and to understand their physiological function in wave
production.
As a first attempt to understand electrophysiologically the functional
role of identified retinal interneurons in spontaneous waves of
excitation, this study made whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from
morphologically identified displaced starburst amacrine cells and pairs
of neighboring starburst and ganglion cells in a whole-mount preparation of the neonatal rabbit retina. These recordings
unequivocally demonstrate a direct participation of displaced starburst
cells in spontaneous rhythmic activities in the developing retina. They also show that displaced starburst cells undergo rhythmic bursts of
subthreshold somatic depolarizations that are closely correlated with
bursts of spikes in neighboring ganglion cells and that both displaced
starburst cells and ganglion cells receive rhythmic synaptic input.
Preliminary results have been reported in abstract form (Zhou,
1997 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Rabbit retinal preparation. Retinas from pigmented
(Dutch Belt and New Zealand Red) and nonpigmented (New Zealand White)
rabbits aged between postnatal day 0 (P0, day of birth) and P6 were
used for this study. No significant differences in the spontaneous activity of ganglion and amacrine cells were found among these strands
of rabbits. Animals were killed with an overdose of Nembutal, and their
eyes were immediately enucleated and hemissected behind the ora
serrata. Retinas were isolated from eyecups in Ames medium (Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) saturated with carbogen (95% O2, 5%
CO2) at either room temperature (21-25°C) or
4°C. Each isolated retina was then cut into two to three pieces and
incubated in carbogen-saturated Ames medium for periods between 0.5 and
8 hr at room temperature. In some earlier experiments, the fluorescent
dye 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, 0.1 µg/ml) was included in
the incubation medium during the first 1-2 hr of incubation in an
effort to facilitate the identification of displaced starburst cells.
In contrast to the selective staining of displaced starburst cells by
DAPI in the adult rabbit retina (Tauchi and Masland, 1984 ), incubation
with DAPI (or intravitreous injection of the dye) did not label
displaced starburst cells exclusively (Wong and Collin, 1989 ; Zhou and
Fain, 1996 ). Although displaced starburst cells and many other cell types were labeled by DAPI after 1 hr incubation, some small-size cell
types in the ganglion cell layer were excluded from the labeled population. Thus the probability of finding displaced starburst cells
was increased to some extent after incubation with DAPI. With
experience, however, it was found that DAPI labeling was unnecessary in
most cases, because identification based solely on the size, shape, and
location of cells in the ganglion cell layer already yielded a high
success rate (~80%) of finding displaced starburst cells. Definitive
identification of a starburst cell was always made morphologically
under epifluorescent illumination at the end of the whole-cell patch
clamp with Lucifer yellow-filled pipettes. Identification of ganglion
cells was made based on their large soma size and the presence of an
axon. No systematic effort was made to classify ganglion cell
subtypes.
Patch-clamp recording. For electrophysiological recordings,
a piece of retina was transferred to a recording chamber and held to
the bottom of the chamber, sclera side down, by a nylon mesh glued to a
platinum ring. The recording chamber was continuously superperfused
with cabogen-saturated Ames medium at a rate of 4-5 ml/min at
34-37°C. Patch-clamp recordings were made from the whole-mount
retina under a 40× water immersion objective lens on a fixed-stage
upright microscope (Axioskop FS; Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) equipped with
differential interference contrast optics, epifluorescence, and a 35 mm
camera. Glial cells and Müller cell endfeet that covered the
neurons in the ganglion cell layer were removed mechanically with a
large-tip patch pipette or a pair of fine forceps. Whole-cell patch
clamp, with a seal resistance >4 G , was made under visual control
from displaced starburst amacrine cells and ganglion cells with 2-5
M resistance electrodes pulled from thick-walled borosilicate filament glass tubing (1.5 mm outer diameter, 0.86 mm inner diameter; Sutter Instruments, San Rafael, CA) on a Flaming-Brown pipette puller
(model P97, Sutter Instruments). Series resistance, typically between 8 and 15 M , was compensated by 20-85% with the series resistance
compensation circuitry in the patch-clamp amplifier (Axopatch 200B;
Axon Instruments, Burlingame, CA). The resting membrane potential
(Vr) was measured in the current-clamp mode (I = 0) immediately after the formation of the
whole-cell clamp configuration. Because of the limited seal resistance
after the formation of a whole-cell configuration in some cells, the
measured Vr was likely an underestimate of the true
in vivo resting potential of the cell. To minimize this
error, only the lower one-third of the cell population tested (which
had more negative resting potentials and often higher seal and input
resistance values) was pooled to produce the mean resting potential and
the SD for starburst and ganglion cells. Dual patch-clamp recordings
from pairs of neighboring cells were made with two identical
patch-clamp amplifiers (Axopatch 200B, Axon Instruments). Data obtained
from both amplifiers were low-pass filtered at 2 kHz
(fc, eight-pole Bessel filter built in the Axopatch
200B amplifier), digitized simultaneously with an analog-to-digital
converter (Digidata 1200, Axon Instruments), and stored on a computer
hard disk. Data generated during long periods (up to 2 hr) of
continuous recordings were also stored on VCR tapes through a pulse
code modulator (model 501; Sony, Tokyo, Japan; 44 kHz sampling rate, 14 bit resolution) and later played back for analysis. These data were
refiltered with an eight-pole Bessel filter (model 901; Frequency
Device, Haverhill, MA) at corner frequencies (fc)
two to five times lower than the Nyquist frequency and were digitized
at sampling rates specified in figure legends. The liquid junction
potential was corrected as described (Fenwick et al., 1982 ; Zhou and
Fain, 1995 ). Data acquisition and analysis were done with pClamp
software (Axon Instruments), Axioscope (Axon Instruments), and Origin
(MicroCal Software Inc., Northampton, MA).
Because starburst cells and many of the ganglion cells recorded had
extensive dendritic trees, voltage clamp at fine distal dendrites was
conceivably inadequate, especially when currents were fast and large.
However, this relatively poor space clamp should not affect the basic
conclusions of this study, because the overall spontaneous activity was
relatively slow (lasting 1-2 sec, see Results) and did not depend on
dendrites being completely voltage-clamped.
Solutions. The standard intracellular (pipette) solution
contained (in mM): 110 KCl, 5 NaOH, 0.5 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 5 EGTA, 10 HEPES,
2 ATP (disodium salt, Sigma), 0.5 GTP (trisodium salt, Sigma), and 2 ascorbate, pH 7.2, with 18 mM KOH. This solution was kept
frozen at 20°C in small aliquots and was supplemented with
0.1-0.3% w/v Lucifer yellow (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) before
use. In a small number of experiments, a portion of the KCl (95 mM) in the pipette solution was replaced with equimolar K-gluconate. In all recordings, the extracellular (bath) solution was
always Ames medium equilibrated with carbogen.
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RESULTS |
Anatomical properties of displaced starburst cells in the
developing rabbit retina
A total of 56 displaced starburst amacrine cells were studied with
whole-cell patch clamp in the whole-mount rabbit retina during the
first postnatal week. At this age, the eyes of the animal were not yet
open, and the retina was still immature (McArdle et al., 1977 ; Greiner
and Weidman, 1982 ; Zhou and Fain, 1996 ). Neurogenesis in the mammalian
retina starts from ganglion cells and amacrine cells (Robinson, 1991 ),
which in rabbits become differentiated in late fetal life (Greiner and
Weidman, 1982 ; Stone et al., 1985 ). By the time of birth, most of the
cells in the ganglion cell and amacrine cell layers of the rabbit
retina are fully differentiated (McArdle et al., 1977 ), and displaced
starburst amacrine cells have already attained an adult-like dendritic
morphology (Wong and Collin, 1989 ).
Figure 1 gives two examples of displaced
starburst cells at different eccentricities of the neonatal rabbit
retina photographed immediately after patch-clamp recording with
Lucifer yellow-filled pipettes. The cell shown in Figure
1A was located near the visual streak of a P3 retina,
whereas the one in Figure 1B was from the midperiphery (~3 mm from the visual streak) of a P0 retina. The morphology of these two cells was typical of all the displaced starburst cells recorded. Their dendrites were nearly radially symmetric and narrowly stratified, with typically four to six primary
dendrites originating from soma 8-10 µm in diameter. Each primary
dendrite was further divided into a number of secondary and tertiary
branches, which formed the intermediate and distal dendritic tree. This
basic branching pattern closely resembled that of adult starburst cells
(Hayden et al., 1980 ; Vaney et al., 1981 ; Famiglietti, 1983 , 1985 ;
Tauchi and Masland, 1984 ; Vaney, 1984 ). However, two unique features
were noted for starburst cells in the neonatal rabbit retina. First,
there were numerous dendritic spines in developing starburst cells
(Fig. 1) (Wong and Collin, 1989 ); second, starburst cells of the
developing retina lacked localized dendritic varicosities seen in
distal dendrites of mature starburst cells (Famiglietti, 1991 ; Wong and
Collin, 1989 ).

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Figure 1.
Examples of Lucifer yellow-filled displaced
starburst amacrine cells photographed immediately after whole-cell
patch-clamp recordings in the whole-mount neonatal rabbit retina.
A, Cell located near the visual streak of a P3 retina
with a patch pipette still attached to the soma. B,
Another cell from the inferior midperiphery (~3 mm from the visual
streak) of a P0 rabbit retina. In this and most other cells, the patch
pipette was successfully removed from the soma at the end of the
recording. A, B, Cells have
radially symmetric and narrowly stratified dendrites. The general
branching pattern of these cells resembles that of adult starburst
cells. However, the numerous dendritic spines seen in these cells are
found only in the neonatal retina. Also notice the lack of varicosities
that are usually seen in distal dendrites of mature starburst cells.
Scale bars, 50 µm.
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Although the dendrites of nearly every starburst cell recorded appeared
to be completely filled with Lucifer yellow at the end of patch-clamp
recording, tracer coupling among starburst cells or between starburst
and other cell types was never observed. This result is in agreement
with a previous report (Wong and Collin, 1989 ) and is consistent with
the belief that starburst cells do not make gap junctions in adult
rabbits (Vaney 1990 ; Wässle and Boycott, 1991 ), although the lack
of Lucifer yellow coupling alone is not sufficient evidence for
starburst cells being not coupled in the neonatal rabbit. It would
certainly have important implications for the circuitry of spontaneous
waves if starburst cells were indeed not coupled in the neonatal
rabbit.
Electrical properties of starburst cells
The intrinsic electrical properties of displaced starburst cells
in the developing rabbit retina were studied under both current- and
voltage-clamp conditions. The resting membrane potential was measured
under current-clamp (I = 0) immediately on the
formation of a whole-cell patch clamp configuration when the cell was
minimally dialyzed (see Materials and Methods). Recordings from
displaced starburst cells revealed a relatively low (hyperpolarized)
resting membrane potential (Vr) of 70 ± 4 mV
(SD, n = 19; see Materials and Methods) in Ames medium
(Ames and Nesbett, 1981 ). This was significantly more hyperpolarized
than the ganglion cells recorded under the same condition (mean
Vr ± SD, 49 ± 5 mV, n = 10). The difference in resting membrane potential between starburst and ganglion
cells may partially contribute to the different excitability of the two
cell types (see below). Frequently, it was also found that the membrane
potential of starburst cells became gradually hyperpolarized by an
additional 3-8 mV from the original resting potential during the first
1-3 min after the formation of the whole-cell configuration, possibly
attributable to intracellular dialysis and/or a gradual increase in
seal resistance.
Figure 2, A and B,
shows voltage- and current-clamp results from a starburst cell in a P0
rabbit retina. Whole-cell currents, shown here after leak subtraction,
were elicited by depolarizing voltage steps of 10 mV increments from a
holding potential (Vh) of 70 mV (Fig.
2A). This overall current waveform contained both inward and outward components, typical in all starburst cells tested.
The transient inward current component consisted mainly of
Na+ currents, because the amplitude of the transient
Ca2+ current was quite small under this recording
condition (Zhou and Fain, 1996 ). The space clamp of these
Na+ currents appeared rather poor (as evident from
the current-voltage relationship and sometimes multiple peaks of
Na currents under voltage-clamp) (data not shown), suggesting that a
significant portion of the currents may be from the dendrites. Note
that, when compared with the peak amplitude of outward K currents, the inward Na+ current component in starburst cells was
usually much smaller, often by a factor of 3-8 in the voltage range
tested ( 60 to +60 mV). This current profile was in clear contrast
with that of the ganglion cells tested, because the peak
Na+ current amplitude in ganglion cells was usually
equivalent to or larger than that of outward K currents (Fig.
2C). Similarly, voltage responses of starburst cells under
current clamp were characteristically different from those of ganglion
cells. Figure 2B shows the membrane potential of the
same starburst cell as in Figure 2A in response to
depolarizing current pulses of 200 pA increments injected under current
clamp at a holding potential near the resting membrane potential. The
starburst cell responded to a prolonged current pulse with a single
spike. The threshold for somatic action potentials in the starburst
cell was between 30 and 35 mV (Fig. 2B). On the
other hand, the threshold for somatic action potentials in the ganglion
cell was approximately 45 mV (Fig. 2D). Action
potentials in ganglion cells were also considerably larger and faster
than those in starburst cells (Fig. 2C,D) and
often consisted of multiple spikes during prolonged depolarizing
current injections (data not shown). Similar results were obtained for
all the starburst and ganglion cells tested.

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Figure 2.
Membrane electric properties of displaced
starburst (A, B, P0 retina) and ganglion
cells (C, D, P3 retina). Currents shown
here have been corrected for membrane leakage. A,
Whole-cell currents from the starburst cell elicited by depolarizing
voltage steps (13 steps in 10 mV increments) under voltage clamp from a
Vh of 70 mV. The transient inward currents are carried
mostly by Na+. B, Voltage responses
from the same starburst cell to depolarizing current pulses of 200 pA
increments under current clamp at approximately 70 mV. As in nearly
all of the starburst cells tested, the action potentials in this cell
contain a single spike and have an activation threshold between 30
and 35 mV. C, Whole-cell currents from a ganglion cell
voltage-clamped at 70 mV in response to the same voltage protocol as
in A. Compared with starburst cells, the ganglion cell
has significantly larger inward Na+ currents, with
the maximum amplitude similar to or larger than that of the outward
K+ currents. D, Voltage responses of
the ganglion cell in C to depolarizing current pulses of
80, 100, 140, and 160 pA in amplitude. The action potentials in the
ganglion cell are larger and faster than those in the starburst cell
B and have a threshold around 45, which is
significantly lower than that in starburst cells. Data shown in this
figure were filtered at 2 kHz and digitized at 10-40 kHz.
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Rhythmic, spontaneous excitation of starburst cells in the
developing retina
To investigate the spontaneous activity of displaced starburst
cells, continuous voltage- and current-clamp recordings were made from
these cells at their resting membrane potential. Displaced starburst
cells recorded under this condition underwent periodic, spontaneous
membrane excitation. Figure 3 shows a segment
of continuous current-clamp recording from the same P0 starburst cell
as shown in Figure 2. The cell was generally quiet except for brief
moments lasting a few seconds during which bursts of activities
occurred abruptly. The bursts of membrane depolarization appeared
rhythmically once every 1-1.5 min and continued for the entire
recording period of ~2 hr. Each burst consisted of a slow membrane
depolarization and many small-amplitude activities riding atop (Fig.
3B).

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Figure 3.
Rhythmic activities from the same starburst cell
in Figure 2A,B. The cell
was current-clamped at its resting membrane potential.
A, Segment of continuous recording showing rhythmic
bursts of membrane depolarization from the cell (upward
deflections). The bursting activity in this cell occurred
regularly at a rate of once every 1-1.5 min throughout the entire
recording period of ~2 hr. B, One of the bursts in
A (arrow) shown on a faster time scale.
The burst was ~2 sec long and 5 mV in amplitude, and it consists of a
slow depolarization with small peaks riding atop. Data shown in this
figure were filtered at 200 Hz and digitized at 1.2 Hz.
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Similar spontaneous activities were found in another 31 displaced
starburst amacrine cells recorded from rabbits aged between P0 and P6
(but see the last paragraph in Results). Shown in Figure 4 is another example of a displaced starburst
cell from a P1 retina recorded first under current clamp and then under
voltage clamp at a holding potential near its resting potential. This
cell showed spontaneous bursts of excitation with a period of 1.5-2.5
min. One of these bursts is shown on an expanded time scale in Figure 4B. The time course of these bursts was relatively
slow, on the order of 1-2 sec (Fig. 4B). In general,
the duration of these spontaneous bursts was quite consistent for each
starburst cell and varied little from cell to cell (within 1-3 sec).
On the other hand, the peak amplitude of the depolarization often
varied from time to time and from cell to cell in the range between 5 and 30 mV. The interburst interval also varied considerably from cell to cell, ranging between 40 sec and 5 min.

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Figure 4.
The pattern of spontaneous bursts from a P1
displaced starburst cell under current and voltage clamp.
A, Continuous patch-clamp recording first under current
clamp (I = 0, top 5 traces) and then
voltage clamp ( 80 mV, bottom 2 traces). Periodic
bursts of membrane depolarization are shown as upward deflections under
current clamp, whereas rhythmic inward currents are seen as downward
deflections under voltage clamp. The average interburst duration (~2
min) is the same in either recording mode. To test the spiking
capability of the cell, depolarizing current pulses were also injected
into the cell during an early part of the recording
(arrow). Data shown in A were filtered at
5 Hz and digitized at 15 Hz. B, One of the bursts of
membrane depolarization (A, arrow) is
shown on an expanded time scale. The burst consists of many
superimposed fast events reminiscent of postsynaptic potentials. Data
shown in this panel were filtered at 600 Hz and digitized at 1.67 kHz.
C, Closer view of the voltage responses to depolarizing
current pulses shown in A (first
trace). The cell is obviously capable of generating somatic
potentials, which have a characteristic single-spike profile and an
activation threshold of approximately 35 mV. The cell was
current-clamped at its resting membrane potential and was depolarized
by current steps of 50 pA increments. Data were filtered at 2 kHz and
digitized at 10 kHz. D, Closer view of a spontaneous
burst of synaptic currents in A (last
trace). The burst consists of numerous fast synaptic currents
and lasts ~2-3 sec. The inset shows a few of these
synaptic currents in more detail. Data were filtered at 600 Hz and
digitized at 1.67 kHz.
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Interestingly, spontaneous activation of somatic action potentials was
never seen in any of the starburst cells tested (when the cell was
current-clamped either near its resting membrane potential or within
±20 mV from the resting potential), although action potentials could
be elicited from these cells by injecting depolarizing current pulses
under current clamp. Figure 4C shows voltage responses to
current pulses of 50 pA increments from the same starburst cell in
Figure 4A. Somatic action potentials were clearly
evoked by whole-cell current injections (Fig. 4C) during the
silent period between bursts of spontaneous excitation (Fig. 4A). Similar spikes could also be elicited
immediately (within 1 sec) before or after a spontaneous bursting event
(data not shown). This result suggests that, if there is a refractory
period between two successive spontaneous waves of excitation in the ganglion cell layer (Feller et al., 1997 ), such refractoriness may not
be caused by the inability of the starburst cell to fire somatic or
dendritic action potentials during this period.
From Figure 4, it seemed likely that bursts of spontaneous membrane
depolarization in starburst cells were a result of nearly synchronous
activation of many postsynaptic potentials (PSPs), although it was also
possible that some of the small, fast peaks might even be dendritic
spikes evoked by the PSPs (see Discussion). Voltage-clamp experiments
from displaced starburst cells at their resting membrane potential also
showed bursts of inward currents reminiscent of postsynaptic currents
(although extrasynaptic currents might also be involved). The bottom
two traces in Figure 4A show membrane currents from
the same starburst cell immediately after the recording was switched
from the current-clamp to the voltage-clamp mode. The cell under
voltage clamp continued to display bursts of spontaneous activities
[postsynaptic currents (PSCs)] with a similar frequency. Each burst
under voltage clamp contained numerous fast synaptic currents (Fig.
4D). The burst duration (1-3 sec) was similar in
either current clamp or voltage clamp. The kinetics of the PSCs under
voltage clamp was also comparable to that of PSPs under current clamp.
Together, these results provide evidence that the periodic membrane
depolarizations seen under current clamp were produced by rhythmic
bursts of synaptic currents. Thus the spontaneous rhythmic activity in
the starburst cell seemed to be synaptically driven but not
intrinsically generated, at least within a single cell.
Rhythmic activities of ganglion cells
To compare the rhythmic excitation of starburst cells with the
activities of ganglion cells in the developing rabbit retina, whole-cell patch clamp recordings were made from ganglion cells under
the same condition as described above. Ganglion cells were identified
based on their large soma size (10-30 µm in diameter) and the
presence of an axon. Figure 5 shows an
example of spontaneous activities from a ganglion cell in a P0 retina.
This cell was recorded under current clamp near its resting membrane
potential of 53 mV. Spontaneous bursts of action potentials were
observed once every 1-2 min with little activity between bursts. Each
burst lasted ~2 sec and contained 3-5 large spikes (60-100 mV in
amplitude). One of the bursts is shown in more detail in Figure
5B. The bursting action potentials in this cell consisted of
a fast spike followed by a distinctive plateau potential.

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Figure 5.
Spontaneous bursts of action potentials in a P0
ganglion cell. A, Current-clamp recording showing bursts
of action potentials occurring at a frequency of once per 1-2 min. The
cell was held near its resting membrane potential of 53 mV.
B, Expanded view of the first burst shown in
A. This burst consists of a train of four action
potentials, each having a large spike amplitude and a distinctive
plateau potential. Data were filtered at 10 Hz (sampled at 20 Hz) in
A and at 200 Hz (sampled at 500 Hz) in B.
Because of the low filter frequency, the spike amplitude in
A appears much smaller.
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Rhythmic activities were also found in another 21 ganglion cells tested
during the first postnatal week. In most of these ganglion cells, the
duration of spontaneous bursts was on the order of 1-3 sec, similar to
that of displaced starburst cells. The interburst interval in ganglion
cells was also similar to that of starburst cells (40 sec-5 min),
suggesting that the spontaneous activities of ganglion and starburst
cells belonged in the same retinal waves. However, unlike displaced
starburst cells whose bursting patterns were primarily homogeneous
among all the cells tested, ganglion cells often had a variety of
bursting behavior. Although the majority of ganglion cells had similar
ranges of burst frequencies and duration, detailed burst properties
varied considerably in some ganglion cells, presumably as a result of the differences among various ganglion cell subtypes. Figure
6A shows results from a P3
ganglion cell under current clamp. This cell underwent rhythmic bursts
of excitation separated by a silent period of ~45 sec. Note, however,
that most of the bursting activities in this cell occurred in
distinctive doublets instead of the singular bursts typically seen in
most ganglion cells. Another example from the same P3 retina is shown
in Figure 6, B-D. This ganglion cell again showed rhythmic
bursting activities at the usual frequency of about once per minute,
but the burst duration (20-40 sec) was significantly longer than the
1-3 sec duration usually found in other cells. Each burst in this cell
contained a train of numerous spikes. Figure 6E shows
yet another ganglion cell from a P5 retina voltage-clamped at a holding
potential of 70 mV. Spontaneous activities of this cell, shown here
as inward postsynaptic currents, were highly periodic throughout the
entire 1 hr period of recording. The peak amplitude of the PSCs decayed
monophasically in each burst. The burst duration in this cell was also
longer than that of most other ganglion cells recorded.

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Figure 6.
Examples of different patterns of spontaneous
activities seen in a small number of ganglion cells. A,
Current-clamp recording from a P3 ganglion cell showing spontaneous
bursting activities occurring in doublets. The overall interburst
interval in this cell is once every 1-3 min, similar to that found in
most ganglion cells. Data were filtered at 10 Hz and digitized at 20 Hz. B, Rhythmic activities from another ganglion cell
current-clamped in the same P3 retina as in A. The
bursts shown here have a much longer duration (20-50 sec) and consist
of clusters of shorter bursts. The interburst interval is well within
the range of 1-3 min. Data in this panel were filtered at 10 Hz and
digitized at 20 Hz. The amplitude of the spikes shown here is much
smaller than in D because of heavy filtering.
C, Expanded view of a burst in B. Data
were filtered at 100 Hz and digitized at 200 Hz. D, Two spontaneous
action potentials in B shown on a faster time scale.
Data were filtered at 2 kHz and digitized at 10 kHz. E,
Voltage-clamp recording (Vh = 70 mV) from a ganglion cell
in a P5 retina showing highly periodic bursts of synaptic currents at a
frequency of approximately one per minute. The burst duration in this
cell is of the order of 30 sec, which is much longer than in most other
cells. Data were filtered at 50 Hz and sampled at 100 Hz.
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Figure 6D also makes the point that rhythmic bursts
of action potentials in neonatal rabbit ganglion cells were most likely associated with periodic bursts of synaptic currents. Similar voltage-
and current-clamp recordings from five other ganglion cells (data not
shown) also confirmed the correlation between bursts of spikes under
current clamp and PSCs under voltage clamp, suggesting that spontaneous
bursts of spikes in neonatal rabbit ganglion cells were driven, to a
large extent, by synaptic input.
Thus both ganglion cells and starburst cells underwent rhythmic
membrane excitation. The interburst duration in both cell types ranged
between 40 sec and 5 min. However, starburst and ganglion cells
differed markedly with respect to the nature of the burst. Although
displaced starburst cells typically produced homogeneous bursts of
subthreshold membrane depolarization, ganglion cells usually generated
bursts of suprathreshold somatic spikes with inhomogeneous burst
kinetics. Ganglion cells of different morphology were included in the
sample and might have contributed to the inhomogeneity in burst
kinetics. No systematic effort was made in the present study to
correlate ganglion cell responses with cell types.
Correlation between spontaneous activities of displaced starburst
cells and ganglion cells
One of the most important features of the spontaneous activity in
the developing retina is its spatiotemporal pattern. Synchronous bursts
of action potentials among ganglion cells have been previously reported
in rat (Maffei and Galli-Resta, 1990 ) and ferret (Meister et al., 1991 )
with extracellular electrodes. To determine whether spontaneous bursts
of subthreshold excitation of displaced starburst cells were also in
synchrony with bursts of action potentials of neighboring ganglion
cells, dual patch-clamp recordings were made from pairs of displaced
starburst cells and ganglion cells. Figure 7
shows a fluorescence photomicrograph of a pair of starburst and
ganglion cells in a P1 retina immediately after dual patch-clamp recording. Temporally correlated activities were indeed found in pairs
of neighboring starburst and ganglion cells (n = 3). Whole-cell current- and voltage-clamp recordings from one of these pairs of cells are shown in Figure 8.
Recordings from this cell pair lasted 35 min during which both cells
continuously underwent rhythmic bursts of excitation. The ganglion cell
(Fig. 8A, top traces) was voltage-clamped
at 70 mV during the entire period shown in the figure, whereas the
displaced starburst cell (bottom traces) was recorded first
under current clamp at its resting potential ( 70 mV) and then under
voltage clamp at the same potential.

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Figure 7.
Fluorescence photomicrograph of a pair of
neighboring starburst (left) and ganglion
(right) cells in a P0 rabbit retina immediately after
simultaneous patch-clamp recording with pipettes filled with Lucifer
yellow. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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Figure 8.
An example of a dual patch-clamp recording from a
pair of starburst and ganglion cells showing close correlation between
the spontaneous activities in the two cells. A, 20 min
segment of dual recording from the ganglion cell under voltage clamp at
70 mV (upper trace) and a nearby displaced starburst
cell under first current clamp (I = 0, bottom left trace) and then voltage clamp
(Vh = 70 mV, bottom right trace).
Spontaneous bursts of excitation in the ganglion cell are shown as
brief inward synaptic currents (downward deflections),
and those from the starburst cell are shown as bursts of either
membrane depolarization (upward deflections,
bottom left) or inward synaptic currents
(downward deflections, bottom right).
Every burst in the starburst cell matches closely in time a burst in
the ganglion cell. Data were filtered at 7 Hz and digitized at 20 Hz.
B, C, Expanded view of the temporal
correlation between two pairs of bursts shown in A. Data
were filtered at 700 Hz and digitized at 2 kHz.
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Rhythmic activities from these two adjacent cells were precisely
synchronized. Every burst of inward synaptic currents in the ganglion
cell matched closely in time a burst of either membrane depolarization
(under current clamp) or inward PSCs (under voltage clamp) in the
starburst cell (Fig. 8A). The precise correlation between the activities of this pair of ganglion and starburst cells is
more clearly seen on a faster time scale in Figure 8, B and
C. In addition to the temporal synchrony, there was also a
significant degree of correlation between the amplitude of the spontaneous activities in these two cells. A large (or small) burst in
the ganglion cell tended to be accompanied by a large (or small) burst
in the starburst cell (Fig. 8A). Thus the spontaneous rhythmic activity of starburst cells was closely correlated with the
synchronous, spontaneous spikes of the neighboring ganglion cells.
Variability of the preparation
It should be pointed out that the ability to detect spontaneous
activities form starburst cells and ganglion cells in the whole-mount
preparation varied significantly from retina to retina, such that
rhythmic activities were found only in ~65% of the retinas tested.
This variability seemed related to the condition of the preparation,
rather than differences among individual starburst and ganglion cells,
because either most of the starburst and ganglion cells recorded in a
retina showed rhythmic spontaneous activities or none of them had any
consistent bursting activity. Similarly, the overall robustness of the
spontaneous activity also appeared to be affected by the condition of
the preparation. It is possible that subtle changes in experimental
conditions may contribute to this variability because the spontaneous
activity seemed quite labile in the isolated rabbit retina. However,
there might also be variability among individual animals, attributable,
for example, to differences in developmental stages (even at the same
age) although no consistent correlation has yet been found between the
rhythmic activity and animal age (P0-P6). The exact cause for this
variability is still under investigation. It will be interesting to
find out if this variability becomes much less significant in younger
(prenatal) rabbits.
 |
DISCUSSION |
This study directly demonstrates that displaced starburst cells
undergo rhythmic bursting excitation in the neonatal rabbit retina. The
frequency and duration of these bursts are similar to those of
spontaneous Ca2+ waves previously seen in the
developing mammalian retina (Wong et al., 1995 ; Feller et al., 1996 ).
Dual patch-clamp recordings also show that the periodic excitation in
starburst cells is closely correlated with that in neighboring ganglion
cells. Together these results provide convincing evidence that
displaced starburst cells are indeed a part of the retinal circuit that
participates in spontaneous retinal waves, thus demonstrating a direct
participation by retinal interneurons in rhythmic bursts of excitation
in the developing mammalian retina. These results also indicate that ACh is likely released rhythmically and concomitantly with retinal waves. Because the propagation of spontaneous retinal waves is blocked
by cholinergic antagonists (Feller et al., 1996 ), it is most likely
that starburst cells constitute a critical component of the circuit,
and they are not simply bystanders being excited at the same time as
the ganglion cells. The finding that displaced starburst cells do not
generate somatic action potentials during periodic bursts of excitation
suggests that not all neurons in the circuit fire action potentials.
Instead, some interneurons may use subthreshold excitation (graded
membrane potentials) to mediate synchronous firings in ganglion
cells.
The fact that action potentials can be evoked from displaced starburst
cells by injections of current pulses under current clamp (Figs. 2, 4)
confirms the previous finding in rabbit retinal slices that starburst
cells are capable of firing somatic action potentials before eye
opening (Zhou and Fain, 1996 ). TTX-sensitive spikes and Na currents in
starburst cells of the rabbit retina were also reported (Zhou and Fain,
1996 ) to disappear right around eye opening (but see also Bloomfield,
1992 ; Jensen, 1995 ; Taylor and Wässle, 1995 ; Peters and Masland,
1996 ). Thus, one might expect starburst cells to use action potentials
for a developmental purpose and not just to be artificially induced to
spike by extrinsic current injections. It is somewhat surprising that
spontaneous somatic spikes in neonatal starburst cells were never
observed in this study, even during rhythmic bursts of excitation. A
possible explanation for this result may be that action potentials are not required at the starburst cell soma. Instead, the cell may use
spikes in the dendrites. It has been estimated the passive propagation
of signals in starburst dendrites is severely attenuated because of the
long and extremely thin dendritic structure (Miller and Bloomfield,
1983 ). However, according to computational simulations (my unpublished
observations), such spatial attenuation may be relieved significantly
by the presence of dendritic Na+ channels at a
density similar to that found in these experiments (Zhou et al., 1996 ).
Thus it is conceivable that action potentials may be used in starburst
dendrites to facilitate the spread of synaptic signals. However, these
dendritic spikes may be unable to trigger a somatic action potential
because of a severe impedance mismatch at the soma and, as a result,
they appear as subthreshold potentials at the soma. It is possible that
spike initiation is easier in starburst dendrites than at the soma,
because of larger input impedance and stronger, more synchronized
synaptic inputs in local dendritic domains. In fact, the lack of
somatic action potentials in starburst cells may likely serve specific
functions within the circuit. For example, because starburst dendrites
are radially symmetric, an action potential at the soma is expected to
induce a centrifugal spread of excitation from a focal point (the soma)
that would be incompatible with the way most spontaneous waves are
known to propagate across local domains of the retina (Feller et al.,
1996 ). Thus, by generating subthreshold somatic responses, the
starburst cell may enable its dendrites to function more autonomously,
so that waves of all directions may be mediated by the cell.
Another interesting finding that emerged from this study is that both
ganglion and starburst cells seemed to receive rhythmic synaptic
inputs, suggesting that extrinsic, periodic input, instead of intrinsic
oscillation in single starburst cells, plays a dominant role in
mediating the rhythmic activity in starburst cells. This finding raises
an important question for future investigation: what cells drive the
starburst cells? Because there has been as yet no evidence that
starburst cells are coupled to other cells via gap junctions, the input
to starburst cells is likely mediated by chemical substances (e.g.,
neurotransmitters, neuromodulators, and possibly ions) from other
cells, perhaps including starburst cells themselves. Thus, spontaneous
waves of excitation in the developing retina are likely mediated by a
network that includes ganglion cells and more than one type of
interneuron. Indeed, from a small number of displaced, nonstarburst
amacrine cells encountered in this study (data not shown), it seems
there are also other interneurons involved in spontaneous activities.
This would suggest that other neurotransmitters may also participate in
signal transmission within the network (see also Shield et al., 1996 ).
Detailed pharmacological studies of the spontaneous activity in
starburst and other cell types, which are currently under way, will
likely provide important information for further understanding of the
synaptic circuitry of this network.
That the spontaneous activity in starburst cells is closely correlated
with that in nearby ganglion cells sheds important light on the
mechanism for the initiation and propagation of retinal waves. Although
this result strongly supports a recent model prediction that starburst
cells participate in the spontaneous propagation of waves in ganglion
cells (Feller et al., 1997 ), it does not support the scenario that
activities in ganglion cells are initiated only when a sufficient
number of nearby starburst cells become coactive (Feller et al., 1997 ).
Because starburst cells do not seem to have spontaneous activities more
frequently than ganglion cells, it is not likely that waves recorded
from ganglion cells are filtered images of the activity in starburst
cells (Feller et al., 1997 ). However, the present study does not
exclude the possibility that waves in starburst and ganglion cells are
filtered images of activity in other retinal cell types.
It is interesting that the overall pattern of the spontaneous activity
is quite homogeneous in the displaced starburst cell population. In
contrast, the burst pattern of some ganglion cells was much more
variable from cell to cell, although the bursting activity in any
particular ganglion cell remained relatively unchanged with time. Thus,
ganglion cells with a burst duration much longer than that in
neighboring starburst cells might also receive inputs from sources in
addition to (or other than) starburst cells. The variability in the
burst pattern of ganglion cells may reflect differences among various
subtypes of ganglion cells as well as the complexity in the development
of various neuronal circuits in the retina (Wong and Oakley, 1996 ).
There may be multiple circuits within the network or multiple cellular
mechanisms (Burgi and Grzywacz, 1994 ) working either in concert or in
different developing periods. Recent reports (Catsicas et al., 1997 ;
Sernagor and O'Donovan, 1997 ; Wong et al., 1997 ) suggest that ACh may
even be able to have an effect on spontaneous retinal activities
without conventional synapses during early periods of development and
that different transmitter systems may be involved at different
developmental stages. More detailed experiments are called for to
understand the correlation between starburst amacrine cells and
different types of ganglion cells during retinal waves. The results
here suggest that starburst cells provide the first opportunity for us
to explore the mechanism of wave production at a level presynaptic to
ganglion cells. This study also demonstrates that paired patch-clamp recordings in the whole-mount developing rabbit retina, particularly in
conjunction with optical imaging, may provide a useful tool for
understanding the functional role of starburst amacrine cells and other
morphologically identifiable neurons in spontaneous retinal waves.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 22, 1997; revised March 9, 1998; accepted March 11, 1998.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant RO1
EY10894, Research to Prevent Blindness Inc., and the University of
Arkansas for Medical Sciences Research Endowment Fund. I thank Dr.
Gordon L. Fain for scientific discussions and for reading this
manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Z. Jimmy Zhou, Department of
Physiology and Biophysics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences,
4301 West Markham Street, Mail Slot 505, Little Rock, AR 72205-7199.
 |
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