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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2000, 20(1):351-360
Developmental Changes in the Neurotransmitter Regulation of
Correlated Spontaneous Retinal Activity
Wai T.
Wong,
Karen L.
Myhr,
Ethan D.
Miller, and
Rachel O. L.
Wong
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University
School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
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ABSTRACT |
Synchronized spontaneous rhythmic activity is a feature common to
many parts of the developing nervous system. In the early visual
system, before vision, developing circuits in the retina generate
synchronized patterns of bursting activity that contain information
useful for patterning connections between retinal ganglion cells
and their central targets. However, how developing retinal circuits
generate and regulate these spontaneous activity patterns is still
incompletely understood. Here we show that in developing retinal
circuits, the nature of excitatory neurotransmission driving correlated
bursting activity in ganglion cells is not fixed but undergoes a
developmental shift from cholinergic to glutamatergic transmission. In
addition, we show that this shift occurs as presynaptic glutamatergic
bipolar cells form functional connections onto the ganglion cells,
implicating the role of bipolar cells in providing endogenous drive to
bursting activity later in development. This transition coincides with
the period when subsets of ganglion cells (On and Off cells) develop
distinct activity patterns that are thought to underlie the refinement of their connectivity with their central targets. Here, our results suggest that the differences in activity patterns of On and Off ganglion cells may be conferred by differential synaptic drive from On
and Off bipolar cells, respectively. Taken together, our results
suggest that the regulation of patterned spontaneous activity by
neurotransmitters undergoes systematic change as new cellular elements
are added to developing circuits and also that these new elements can
help specify distinct activity patterns appropriate for shaping
connectivity patterns at later ages.
Key words:
retinal development; ferret retina; spontaneous activity; retinal waves; activity dependent; APB; glutamate
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INTRODUCTION |
Electrical activity in the
developing nervous system is characterized by spontaneous periodic
bursts of action potentials that are synchronized among neighboring
cells (Feller, 1999 ; O'Donovan, 1999 ; Wong, 1999 ). Such activity
occurs in the immature nervous systems of different species (Masland,
1977 ; Galli and Maffei, 1988 ; Meister et al., 1991 ; Gummer and Mark,
1994 ; Sernagor and Grzywacz, 1996 ; Wong et al., 1998 ; Zhou, 1998 ) and
has been implicated in the development and refinement of neuronal
connectivity (Katz and Shatz, 1996 ; Wong, 1999 ). Because of this
functional importance, recent work has focused on how coordinated
network oscillations are produced and regulated across development.
Spontaneous rhythmic activity in structures from the spinal cord to the
hippocampus and retina often requires excitatory neurotransmission (O'Donovan, 1999 ). Intriguingly, spontaneous rhythmic activity occurs
before and throughout the period when synaptic networks are assembled
(Wong et al., 1993 ; Spitzer et al., 1995 ; Catsicas et al., 1998 ; Milner
and Landmesser, 1999 ), raising the question of whether unique or even
transient mechanisms are required for its production. Additionally, as
new synaptic elements are incorporated across development, they may
also exert regulatory influences that modify activity patterns in ways
appropriate for establishing connectivity at each stage of development.
These questions can be studied readily in the retina because its
anatomy, circuitry, function, and development are well understood. Figure 1 schematically represents retinal
circuits at two major phases of development in the ferret. In the first
2 postnatal weeks, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) receive synaptic input
from a lateral network of GABAergic and cholinergic amacrine cells. At
this stage, RGCs undergo synchronized bursting activity in the form of
propagating waves with all cells exhibiting a common bursting pattern.
This activity is driven by cholinergic transmission (Feller et al.,
1996 ; Penn et al., 1998 ) and modulated by GABAergic transmission
(Fischer et al., 1998 ). Later, in the third and fourth week, the
vertical pathway comprising glutamatergic bipolar and photoreceptor
cells becomes assembled (Greiner and Weidman, 1981 ). Around this time,
RGCs differentiate into On and Off subclasses with their dendritic
arbors stratifying into different sublaminae in the inner plexiform
layer (IPL) (Wong and Oakley, 1996 ; McCarthy et al., 1998 ) and their
axonal terminals segregating into On and Off sublaminae in the dorsal
lateral geniculate nucleus (Linden et al., 1981 ; Hahm et al., 1999 ). In
addition, On and Off RGC populations begin to develop distinct bursting
patterns. These contain cues that are appropriate for specifying the
segregation of On and Off axonal arbors into separate thalamic
sublaminae (Lee and Wong, 1996 ; Miller, 1996 ; Wong and Oakley,
1996 ).

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Figure 1.
Schematic drawing showing the nature of inputs to
ferret RGCs at different stages in neonatal development before vision.
Top, At P7, RGCs (GCs) are known to
receive mainly cholinergic (ACh) and GABAergic input in
the inner plexiform layer (IPL) from laterally
projecting amacrine cells. (Cholinergic cells also colocalized GABA.)
Amacrine cells may be conventional, with their somas in the inner
nuclear layer (INL), or displaced, with their somas in
the ganglion cell layer (GCL). At this stage, ganglion
cells often have their dendrites distributed throughout the width of
the IPL. Bottom, Later in development, at
P20, GCs have differentiated into On and Off
GCs and have stratified their dendrites within the
IPL. They continue to receive input from the lateral
network of amacrine cells, but in addition, they now receive
glutamatergic input from a vertical network of bipolar interneurons,
which are in turn postsynaptic to the photoreceptors. On ganglion cells
receive input from On bipolars in the inner IPL, whereas
Off ganglion cells receive input from Off bipolars in the outer
IPL.
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In this study, we examined how the development of retinal circuits
contributes to the regulation of spontaneous rhythms. We monitored
spontaneous bursting in RGCs using calcium imaging and whole-cell
recordings and determined pharmacologically at each stage the relative
contributions from the lateral cholinergic and the vertical
glutamatergic networks. We also examined the functional development of
the bipolar circuitry in relation to its potential contribution to
shaping differential On and Off activity patterns.
Parts of this paper have been published previously (Miller et
al., 1998 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation of tissue. Ferret kits were obtained from
Marshall Farms and used between the ages of postnatal day 7 (P7) and P23. The kits were deeply anesthetized with 5%
halothane and quickly decapitated. The eyes were then enucleated, and
the retinae were isolated from the eyecups in 4°C, oxygenated
Ringer's solution. The Ringer's solution contained (in
mM): 128 NaCl, 1 MgCl2, 5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 10 D-glucose, and 20 mM HEPES (all reagents from Sigma, St. Louis, MO), pH 7.4. The retinae were floated onto a clean glass slide and held flat by a
piece of black Millipore (Bedford, MA) filter paper as described
previously (Wong and Oakley, 1996 ). To prepare retinal slices, we cut
small pieces of retinae on the filter paper (150-200 µm thick) using
a tissue chopper (Lukasiewicz and Roeder, 1995 ).
Calcium imaging. Calcium imaging was performed on retinal
whole mounts maintained in oxygenated Ringer's solution at 35°C. For
P7-P8 retinae, cells in the ganglion cell layer were loaded with
fura-2 by incubating the tissue in 10 µM fura-2 AM and
0.001% pluronic acid in Ringer's solution for 30 min at room
temperature and 30 min at 30°C. In the older neonates, a
preincubation step was introduced in which small slits were made in the
peripheral retina and small drops of a concentrated solution of fura-2
AM in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO; 50 µg of indicator in 50 µl of DMSO; 5-8 µl of 2.5% pluronic acid in DMSO; all reagents from Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) were placed above the slits using a Hamilton syringe (10 µl capacity). Thereafter, the retinae were placed in the
incubation solution as described for the P7-P8 retinae. These loading
techniques have been described in detail elsewhere (Baldridge, 1996 ;
Wong and Oakley, 1996 ).
Bursting activity was recorded by monitoring ratiometric changes in
fluorescence intensity at 340 and 380 nm excitation. Images were
acquired using a filter wheel, shutter assembly (Sutter Instruments), and an SIT camera (Hamamatsu) under computer control (Image-1FL; Universal Imaging Corporation, West Chester, PA). Images were captured
every 2.8 sec, and the analysis was performed off-line using Image-1FL.
Estimated intracellular calcium levels
([Ca2+]i) were
obtained by conversion of the ratios to
[Ca2+]i based on a
calibration curve obtained before the experiment (Wong et al., 1995 ;
Wong and Oakley, 1996 ).
Whole-cell recordings. For electrical recordings, retinal
slices or whole mounts were used. The tissue was maintained at 32°C in oxygenated Ringer's solution. For whole-mount recordings, Muller end-feet covering the cell bodies in the ganglion cell layer were mechanically cleared before patching. For both slices and whole mounts,
debris covering the ganglion cell somas was removed by gentle suction
with a patch pipette with an enlarged tip.
Gigaohm seals were formed onto ganglion cells with a new pipette
containing (in mM): 133 cesium gluconate, 10 TEA chloride, 0.4 MgCl2, 10 NaCl, and 7 sodium HEPES, with
0.02-0.04% Lucifer yellow. The whole-cell configuration was achieved
by suction and buzzing (Axopatch 200B). Liquid junction potentials were
compensated before sealing onto cells with the pipette offset ( 14.5
mV). Cells were held in voltage-clamp mode at the reversal potential for chloride-mediated currents to isolate glutamate- and
acetylcholine-mediated (cationic) currents. The chloride reversal
potential was determined to be 55 mV, as assessed by plotting the
I-V relationship of the cell's response to puffs of
glycine. This value was close to the calculated value of 62 mV.
Continuous recordings of spontaneous activity (at least 4 min for old
retinas and at least 8 min for young retinas) were saved onto a
DAT recorder (DAS75; Dagan).
Data were analyzed off-line with a program written in MatLab after
being downloaded at 10 or 11 kHz. Drug effects were measured by
comparing the charge transferred per minute in the absence and presence
of antagonists. Charge transferred was calculated as the area under the
current trace above the baseline. The average charge transfer per
minute was calculated as the total charge transferred divided by the
duration of the recording (in minutes). This provided a comparison of
the mean activity level of the cells.
Pharmacology. For both calcium imaging and whole-cell
recordings, antagonists to ionotropic glutamate and cholinergic
receptors were bath applied after a baseline recording of the bursting
activity was obtained. Each recording involving the application of
drugs was performed on a separate piece of retina. Ionotropic glutamate antagonists used include
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-nitro-2,3-dioxo-benzo(f)quinozaline-7-sulfonamide (NBQX; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA), a selective AMPA/kainate receptor antagonist, and 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid
(D-APV; Precision, Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada; D,L-APV; Research Biochemicals), a selective
NMDA receptor antagonist. Selective blockade of
GABAA receptors was achieved with bicuculline
(Research Biochemicals), and blockade of glycinergic receptors was
achieved with strychnine (Sigma). Activation of the metabotropic
glutamate receptor mGluR6 was achieved with
D,L-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (APB; Calbiochem, La
Jolla, CA). Cholinergic antagonists used were dihydrobetaerythrodine
(DH E; Sigma), a competitive nicotinic receptor antagonist (Rapier et
al., 1990 ), and D-tubocurarine chloride (curare; Sigma), a
general nicotinic cholinergic blocker. Because antagonists may be less
selective in the younger ages, we used a third neuronal nicotinic
receptor antagonist, mecamylamine (Sigma), that acts as a
noncompetitive blocker, binding primarily to the open channel
configuration of the nicotinic receptor (Varanda et al., 1985 ). The
apparent drop in baseline
[Ca2+]i after the
addition of bicuculline arises from the differential absorption of UV
light by the antagonist as assessed in Fischer et al. (1998) and does
not represent a real reduction of baseline intracellular calcium
levels. Spontaneous calcium elevations (calcium peaks) were scored
similarly on this declining baseline.
The doses of antagonists used in the study were those that have been
demonstrated previously to block evoked responses by the application of
the relevant agonists (Wong, 1995a ,b ; Fischer et al., 1998 ). Similar
doses have also been used to block specific modes of neurotransmission
in other spontaneously active systems (Roerig et al., 1997 ; Chub and
O'Donovan, 1998 ; Garaschuk et al., 1998 ; Schwartz et al., 1998 ; Milner
and Landmesser, 1999 ).
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RESULTS |
Contribution of cholinergic transmission to spontaneous activity
across development
Rhythmic bursting activity in the ganglion cells is characterized
by periodic increases in
[Ca2+]i
(Fig. 2). Calcium imaging of
whole-mounted retinae reveals that early in development (P7-P8),
blockade of nicotinic cholinergic transmission by the bath application
of the antagonist DH E resulted in a significant decrease in the
bursting rates in RGCs (Fig. 2A). By contrast, the
same drug application in older retinae (P20-P23) did not reduce the
rate of bursting activity (Fig. 2B). Quantification of the results shows that although DH E suppressed the mean bursting rate of ganglion cells in the younger retinae to 66.1 ± 2.1% (± SEM) of the baseline rate, it failed to suppress bursting activity in
the older retinae, even appearing to increase it slightly to 111.1 ± 2.5% of baseline rates (Fig. 2C). This may be an
indirect effect arising from a small degree of excitatory cholinergic
drive onto inhibitory GABAergic or glycinergic neurons that are known in the later ages to suppress spontaneous bursting in ganglion cells
(Fischer et al., 1998 ). The changing effect of cholinergic blockade was
also observed with the other antagonists used. In younger retinae,
mecamylamine reduced bursting to a comparable 69.9 ± 2.4% of the
baseline rate, whereas curare, a commonly used antagonist, had a larger
effect and abolished activity altogether (0 ± 0%) in all cells
(Fig. 2C). In marked contrast, even curare failed to
decrease bursting frequency in the older retinae (97.3 ± 5.2%).
These results indicate that although excitatory nicotinic cholinergic
transmission is important in driving correlated bursting activity early
on, its contribution diminishes later in development.

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Figure 2.
Changing dependence of spontaneous bursting
activity in RGCs on cholinergic transmission as evaluated with calcium
imaging in the ganglion cell layer. A, B, Examples of
the effect of DH E, a nicotinic cholinergic antagonist, on the
bursting activity of cells at P8 (A) and P20
(B) (duration of drug application is denoted by
horizontal bar). C,
Quantitative summary of the effects of cholinergic blockade with
various antagonists on the rate of spontaneous bursting at P7-P8 and
P20-P22. Burst rates in the various cholinergic antagonists are
expressed as a percentage of the rate under control conditions
(Ringer's solution) immediately preceding the bath application of the
drug. Effects of drugs at each age were significant, except for curare
at P20-P22 (Mann-Whitney test, p < 0.001). The
concentrations of drugs used were 100-200 µM (DH E),
20-50 µM (curare), and 80-160 µM
[mecamylamine (Mec)] (r = number
of recordings; n = number of cells
monitored).
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Contribution of glutamatergic transmission to spontaneous activity
across development
To assess the contribution of glutamatergic transmission across
the same period of development, we monitored spontaneous bursting activity in the absence and presence of antagonists to ionotropic glutamate receptors at the two age groups using calcium imaging. At
P7-P8, applications of APV and NBQX separately decreased bursting rates by a small amount; the combined application of both antagonists decreased the bursting rate to a greater extent but did not eliminate bursting activity entirely (Fig. 3). In
older retinae, at P20-P23, separate applications of NBQX and APV in
each case reduced the bursting rate more effectively than in the
younger retina, but bursting activity was similarly not eliminated
(Fig. 4). However, the combined
application of both NBQX and APV abolished bursting activity
completely.

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Figure 3.
Effect of ionotropic glutamatergic blockade on the
bursting activity of representative cells in P7-P8 retinae as
evaluated by calcium imaging. Each trace plots the
variations in somatic [Ca2+]i over
time. The durations of drug applications are denoted by the
horizontal bars.
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Figure 4.
Effect of ionotropic glutamatergic blockade on the
bursting activity of representative cells in P20-P21 retinae as
monitored by calcium imaging. The durations of drug applications are
denoted by the horizontal bars.
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Previous experiments have demonstrated that the spontaneous
intracellular calcium elevations in ganglion cells correspond to bursts
of action potentials measured by electrophysiology (Penn et al., 1998 ;
Wong et al., 1998 ). To confirm that the application of NBQX and APV
abolished activity by blocking neurotransmission, we performed
whole-cell patch recordings of ganglion cells in the absence and
presence of these antagonists. Under voltage clamp at the reversal
potential for Cl , periodically occurring
postsynaptic currents (PSCs) were observed for both age groups (Fig.
5). Although the combined addition of NBQX and APV to younger retinae did not eliminate these currents, the
same drug application in older retinae abolished all spontaneous PSCs.
Thus, the absence of periodic spontaneous calcium elevations in the
presence of NBQX and APV arises from the blockade of spontaneous cationic currents.

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Figure 5.
Development of the dependence of postsynaptic
currents on glutamatergic input. Ganglion cells were voltage clamped at
the reversal potential for Cl . Top
(P8), The glutamate receptor antagonists did not block the
periodic postsynaptic potentials. Bottom (P23), Top
Trace, A recording from a representative ganglion cell shows
the more complex older bursting pattern. Middle
Trace, This record is an example of the glutamate
receptor antagonists completely eliminating all postsynaptic
potentials. Bottom Trace, The potentials
returned within 8 min of washing out the antagonists.
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Quantification of the results from calcium imaging and voltage-clamp
recordings are summarized in Figure 6. In
younger P7-P8 retinae, NBQX and APV each reduced mean bursting rates
by similar amounts (81.4 ± 2.9 and 82.1 ± 1.9%
respectively), whereas the combination of the antagonists decreased
bursting to 55.9 ± 1.2% of the baseline (Fig.
6A). Addition of DH E to NBQX and APV further reduced bursting activity to 28.7 ± 1.3% of baseline rates (Fig. 6A). This suggests that for this early age group,
both acetylcholine and glutamate contribute to spontaneous bursting
activity of the ganglion cells and that the excitatory drives mediated
via cholinergic, glutamatergic AMPA/kainate receptors and glutamatergic
NMDA receptors are additive in nature. In older P20-P23 retinae, NBQX
alone decreased mean bursting rates to 42.6 ± 1.8%, whereas APV
alone reduced mean bursting rates to 74.9 ± 2.6%, suggesting
that at the older ages, the excitatory drive to spontaneous bursting as
mediated via AMPA/kainate receptors is larger than that mediated via
NMDA receptors. When NBQX and APV are applied together, the bursting rate in older retinae was reduced to 1.1 ± 0.4% of baseline
values. This trend is also corroborated by measurements of charge
transfer for the postsynaptic currents in patch-clamp recordings; when NBQX and APV were applied together to younger P7-P8 retinae, the average charge transfer per minute decreased to 63 ± 9% of
baseline values. In contrast, the same application to older P20-P23
retinae had a much larger effect, reducing the average charge transfer per minute more markedly to 5 ± 1% of baseline values (Fig.
6B).

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Figure 6.
Quantitative summary of the effects of ionotropic
glutamatergic blockade on spontaneous bursting activity at P7-P8 and
P20-P22. A, From calcium recordings, burst rates in the
presence of various antagonists are expressed as a percentage of the
rate under control conditions (Ringer's solution) preceding the bath
application of the antagonists. Drug concentrations applied were 10 µM (NBQX) , 100 µM (D-APV), and
100 µM (DH E). All effects were significant
(Mann-Whitney test, p < 0.001;
r = number of recordings; n = number of cells monitored). B, From voltage-clamp
recordings, the charge transfer per minute in the presence of NBQX (10 µM) and D-APV (100 µM) is
expressed as the percentage of the charge transfer per minute in
Ringer's solution preceding the bath application of the antagonists.
The antagonists decreased the charge transfer per minute somewhat for
cells from P7 to P8 (n = 6;
p = 0.0640, Student's t test,
paired two-tail), whereas they eliminated nearly all charge transfer
for cells from P20 to P24 (n = 12;
p = 0.0002, Student's t test,
paired two-tail).
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Collectively, these results show that, contrary to the developmental
trend observed with cholinergic transmission, the contribution of
excitatory glutamatergic transmission to spontaneous bursting activity
increases across development and becomes essential to bursting activity
per se in older neonates. This requirement for glutamatergic
transmission is absolute even in the absence of inhibitory drive from
GABAergic and glycinergic amacrine cells. The combination of NBQX and
APV continues to suppress all bursting activity even in the presence of
antagonists to GABAergic (bicuculline, 150 µM) and
glycinergic (strychnine, 1-5 µM) transmission, as assessed by calcium imaging in whole-mount retina (data not shown).
Maturation of functional connections between bipolar
interneurons and ganglion cells
Our results thus far indicate that spontaneous activity in the
ganglion cells becomes totally dependent on glutamatergic transmission as the glutamatergic bipolar interneurons mature and make synaptic contact onto ganglion cells. However, the maturation of the bipolar cell circuitry has thus far been inferred only from anatomical observations (Greiner and Weidman, 1981 ). To implicate bipolar cells
further as a source of transmission driving spontaneous activity in
ganglion cells in the older neonates, we examined the time at which
bipolar cells make functional glutamatergic connections onto ganglion
cells. We assayed for the presence of bipolar-to-ganglion cell
connections at different ages by stimulating the dendrites of bipolar
cells in the outer plexiform layer and measuring evoked responses in
cells in the ganglion cell layer (Fig.
7). This experiment was performed in
retinal slices in which puffs of potassium chloride were delivered to
the outer plexiform layer via a patch pipette during calcium imaging.
The presence of a functional drive from bipolar cells was indicated by
the ability to evoke repeatedly a rise in
[Ca2+]i in the
surrounding ganglion cells and amacrine cells. Because our previous
anatomical analysis of the development of bipolar cells suggests the
presence of morphologically differentiated bipolar cells by P10-P11
(Miller et al., 1999 ), we stimulated retinal slices from P11 to P21
animals. Intracellular calcium responses were evaluated in multiple
cells in each retinal slice recording; the number of retinae recorded
at each age were as follows: P11-P12, n = 3; P13-P14,
n = 3; P15-P19, n = 3; and P19-P22, n = 6. We found that evoked responses in the ganglion
cell layer can be elicited beginning from P13 but not in younger P11
retinae, even though ganglion cells at this age were responsive to
direct applications of exogenous glutamate (Fig.
8). The glutamatergic nature of the
transmission of the bipolar-to-ganglion cell connection was confirmed
by the ability of NBQX and APV to block reversibly the evoked responses
in the ganglion cell and inner nuclear layers.

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Figure 7.
Experimental setup for detecting functional
bipolar-to-ganglion cell connections. View of a fura-2-loaded P21
retinal slice under 380 nm illumination. The tip of a
K+-filled patch pipette (asterisk)
was positioned at the outer plexiform layer (OPL). A
single puff (10 msec; 10 psi) evoked a rise in
[Ca2+]i in many cells (shown by the
overlay of dark profiles)
in this field. The regions of elevated
[Ca2+]i were revealed by digital
subtraction of images (each image was a 16 frame average) preceding and
immediately after the puff. The subtracted image was then overlaid
digitally with a background image (average of 3 images) to produce the
composite image shown here. Arrows indicate cells that
responded to the puff, most likely because of activation of bipolar
cells with dendrites in the OPL; regions near the
pipette tip were likely to be stimulated directly. GCL,
Ganglion cell layer; INL, inner nuclear layer;
ONL, outer nuclear layer.
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Figure 8.
Maturation of the bipolar-to-ganglion cell
communication as assessed by evoked responses in RGCs at various ages.
Bipolar cells were stimulated by local puffs of K+
as [Ca2+]i in ganglion cells within
the field of view was monitored as described in Figure 7.
Vertical marks on the time
axis indicate when a puff was delivered, and the traces
above each axis reveal the changes in
[Ca2+]i of a nearby ganglion cell. To
ensure that we maximized glutamatergic excitation to the ganglion cell,
we abolished inhibition by bathing the slice in picrotoxin (100 µM) and strychnine (5 µM) (solution
A; indicated by horizontal bars). The
glutamatergic nature of the response in the ganglion cells was
confirmed by the elimination of evoked responses in the presence of APV
(100 µM) and NBQX (10 µM) (solution
B). The ability to generate evoked responses resumed
after washout of the glutamatergic antagonists. The inability to evoke
a response in ganglion cells at P11 was unlikely to be caused by an
insensitivity to glutamate because application of glutamate (100 µM; horizontal bar C)
produced an increase in [Ca2+]i.
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These observations suggest that bipolar cells can provide functional
glutamatergic drive to retinal ganglion cells and amacrine cells
beginning around P13. This result is consistent with the interpretation
that the increasing dependence of spontaneous bursting in ganglion
cells on glutamatergic transmission during neonatal development occurs
as the functional glutamatergic drive from bipolar cells to ganglion
cells develops and matures.
Effects of APB on bursting activity of On and Off
ganglion cells
To implicate further the role of endogenous glutamatergic
signaling from bipolar cells in driving spontaneous bursting activity in ganglion cells, we examined ganglion cell activity using an intervention that suppresses endogenous bipolar activity. The metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR6, which binds to the agonist APB, is expressed in On bipolar cells and localized to its
dendrites but is not expressed at all in Off bipolar cells (Nomura et
al., 1994 ; Ueda et al., 1997 ). In the absence of light stimulation, On
bipolar cells are hyperpolarized by glutamate via activation of
APB-sensitive mGluR6 receptors on these cells. By contrast, Off
bipolar cells, lacking the APB-sensitive receptors, are depolarized after activation of ionotropic glutamate receptors (Slaughter and
Miller, 1981 ; Nawy and Jahr, 1990 ; de la Villa et al., 1995 ). Thus, the
application of APB to older P20-P23 retinae will suppress endogenous
glutamatergic drive originating from the On bipolar cells but not that
from Off bipolar cells. By measuring spontaneous bursting activity in
On and Off ganglion cells in the presence of APB, we were able to
examine the role of endogenous bipolar signaling in driving bursting activity.
Figure 9 shows the effects of APB on the
activity patterns of On and Off RGCs in a P21 retina at the age when
glutamatergic transmission is absolutely required for spontaneous
bursting activity in the ganglion cells. Putative On and Off ganglion
cells were classified according to their relative burst rates and by
their dendritic stratification patterns after intracellular dye filling (Wong and Oakley, 1996 ). To reveal the effects of APB on bipolar cells,
we first removed inhibition by GABA and glycine from amacrine cells
using the antagonists bicuculline and strychnine. As demonstrated previously (Fischer et al., 1998 ), On cells showed a marked increase in
bursting rates after disinhibition (Fig. 9A). Subsequently, when APB was applied, the activity in On ganglion cells was abolished, whereas that in Off cells persisted. These results are confirmed by the
quantification of the data from recordings from several retinae (Fig.
9B). This preferential total suppression of bursting activity in On ganglion cells by the hyperpolarization of On bipolar cells indicates that in the On pathway at least, endogenous synaptic drive from bipolar cells is absolutely required for bursting activity in ganglion cells after the formation of functional bipolar-to-ganglion cell connections.

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Figure 9.
Effect of APB on On and Off ganglion cell activity
in the absence of GABAergic and glycinergic inhibition as evaluated
with calcium imaging. A, Application of APB (indicated
by horizontal bar) abolishes bursting
activity in On ganglion cells but not Off ganglion cells in P21 retina.
Bursting activity recovers after the washout of APB. B,
Quantitative summary of the effect of APB in On and Off ganglion cells
in P17-P22 retinae is shown. Burst rates in APB are expressed as a
percentage of the rate calculated for the period immediately preceding
the application of APB under conditions of GABAergic and glycinergic
blockade. APB reduced the burst rate in Off ganglion cells but
preferentially abolished bursting altogether in On ganglion cells.
These effects were statistically significant (Mann-Whitney
U test, p < 0.001;
r = number of recordings; n = number of cells monitored). Bic, Bicuculline;
Stry, strychnine.
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DISCUSSION |
Neurotransmitter control of spontaneous activity
during development
In this study, we demonstrate that the regulation of synchronized
spontaneous activity in the ferret retina undergoes progressive change
as the retina develops. Taken together with previous work, the results
in this study enable us to put together a more unified picture of how
patterned spontaneous activity is regulated in the developing ferret
retina (Burgi and Grzywacz, 1994 ; Feller et al., 1997 ; Fischer et al.,
1998 ; Butts et al., 1999 ). In the early phase of development, during
the first 2 postnatal weeks, ganglion cells receive synaptic input
primarily from a lateral network of amacrine cells (Fig.
10A). These amacrine
cells drive spontaneous correlated bursting in ganglion cells using
excitatory GABAergic (Fischer et al., 1998 ) and cholinergic (Feller et
al., 1996 ) transmission. As glutamatergic bipolar cells are introduced into the retinal circuitry late in the second postnatal week and make
initial contact with ganglion cells, excitatory glutamatergic transmission becomes increasingly important in driving spontaneous bursting in ganglion cells, whereas cholinergic transmission diminishes in importance. It is also at this stage that GABAergic transmission from amacrine cells switches from depolarizing to hyperpolarizing and
begins to exert an inhibitory modulatory influence on spontaneous bursting (Fischer et al., 1998 ). These changing effects of glutamate, acetylcholine, and GABA on regulating spontaneous bursting activity are
represented in Figure 10B. Thus, the overall
mechanism seems to be one in which patterned spontaneous bursting is
regulated by various forms of neurotransmission acting in an additive
and coordinated manner (see Sernagor and Grzywacz, 1999 ). These
regulatory effects change during development to accommodate new
elements of retinal circuitry as they are added, to sustain a
continuous and relevant output to retinal targets in the brain where
retinogeniculate connections continue to be refined.

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Figure 10.
Changing effects of neurotransmission on
spontaneous rhythmic bursting in RGCs. A, Forms of
neurotransmission from presynaptic cells and their effects on
spontaneous activity in ganglion cells at P7 and at P20 (+, excitation;
, inhibition; X, nonparticipating via nicotinic
receptors). B, Schematic showing developmental changes
in the effect of glutamatergic, cholinergic, and GABAergic
neurotransmission on the spontaneous bursting activity.
GC, RGC; GCL, ganglion cell layer;
INL, inner nuclear layer.
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What are the actual retinal connections responsible for
neurotransmitter regulation of spontaneous activity? In the earlier developmental period, at P7-P8, spontaneous bursting is driven additively by glutamate, acetylcholine, and GABA. Although cholinergic and GABAergic amacrine-to-ganglion cell connections have been documented at this time (Greiner and Weidman, 1981 ), the source of
glutamate at this stage is less clear. The absence of bipolar synapses
at this time raises the possibility that glutamate may be secreted in a
paracrine manner by ventricular cells or precursors to bipolar cells
(Pow et al., 1994 ). Alternatively, potential transient connections
between immature glutamatergic photoreceptors, observed to extend
synaptophysin-positive processes into the IPL at this stage, may act as
a source of glutamatergic transmission (Johnson et al., 1999 ). The
additive nature of glutamatergic and cholinergic drives at this early
stage also suggests that glutamate, at least in part, exerts a direct
effect on ganglion cells, as opposed to acting solely via intermediate
cholinergic cells presynaptic to the ganglion cells. At the later
stage, at P17-P23, when endogenous glutamatergic drive from bipolar
cells becomes essential for spontaneous activity, the waning of
cholinergic nicotinic regulation indicates that glutamatergic
excitation must also occur directly onto ganglion cells. However,
despite the decrease in cholinergic nicotinic drive at this stage, it
is unlikely that a dismantling of connections from cholinergic amacrine
cells to ganglion cells occurs because these connections are present at
maturity, subserving important functions in adult vision (Vaney, 1990 ;
Peters and Masland, 1996 ; He and Masland, 1997 ).
Developmental changes in the neurotransmitter regulation of
spontaneous activity have also been observed in the retina of the
embryonic chick (Sernagor and O'Donovan, 1997 ; Catsicas et al., 1998 ;
Wong et al., 1998 ), as well as in other developing systems, such as in
the hippocampus (Garaschuk et al., 1998 ) and spinal cord (Chub and
O'Donovan, 1998 ; Milner and Landmesser, 1999 ). It is possible that
conserved mechanisms exist in which excitatory cholinergic and
GABAergic circuits are first assembled and then followed by the
subsequent introduction of glutamatergic connections, coinciding with
the excitatory-to-inhibitory reversal of GABAergic transmission (Ben
Ari et al., 1997 ; Leinekugel et al., 1997 ). The changing regulatory
control of spontaneous activity described here may be a reflection of
the developmental rules by which many neuronal circuits are assembled
at each stage. Lastly, other modes of transmission such as those
mediated via muscarinic receptors may also impinge on the regulation of
spontaneous bursting (Zhou and Zhao, 1999 ).
Mechanisms generating diversity in spontaneous
activity patterns
In the early stage of development, before bipolar synaptogenesis,
spontaneous activity propagates across the retina in the form of waves,
with RGCs of all classes sharing a uniform activity pattern. The
spatial and temporal features of this patterned activity are thought to
contain information necessary to refine the connectivity of ganglion
cell arbors in the lateral geniculate nucleus, namely, the segregation
of RGC arbors into eye-specific laminae and the refinement of
retinotopic maps (Wong, 1999 ). However, later in development, at the
time of bipolar synaptogenesis, a diversification in bursting rhythms
develops between neighboring cells; ganglion cells belonging to the On
and Off subclasses begin to display two sets of distinct bursting
rhythms (Wong and Oakley, 1996 ). The development of this difference in
patterned activity is suitable for directing the activity-dependent
segregation (Hahm et al., 1991 , 1999 ; Cramer and Sur, 1997 ) of On and
Off ganglion cell arbors into separate geniculate sublaminae occurring
at this time (Lee and Wong, 1996 ; Miller, 1996 ).
What mechanisms in the retina give rise to these distinct On- and
Off-specific activity patterns at the later stage in development? Previous work in this laboratory has demonstrated that GABAergic transmission can differentially modulate bursting in On and Off cells
by suppressing On cells to a larger extent than Off cells (Fischer et
al., 1998 ). However, our previous and present studies show that the
disparity in bursting rates of On and Off ganglion cells, although
reduced, still persists in the absence of GABAergic and glycinergic
signaling (see Fig. 9A). Because cholinergic blockade does
not affect bursting patterns significantly at this stage, these On- and
Off-specific rhythms are likely to be driven by glutamatergic
transmission. In addition, glutamatergic bipolar cells, which are
differentiated into On and Off subclasses (Miller et al., 1999 ), begin
to make synaptic contact with ganglion cells at approximately the same
time that diverse bursting rhythms emerge (Greiner and Weidman, 1981 ),
further implicating the role of bipolar signaling in generating On and
Off rhythms.
How can glutamatergic bipolar transmission confer distinct bursting
rhythms in On and Off ganglion cells? Our observation that APB
abolishes spontaneous bursting in On ganglion cells but not in Off
ganglion cells (Fig. 9) indicates that On and Off bipolar cells are
likely to provide separate glutamatergic drives onto On and Off
ganglion cells, respectively, by the third postnatal week. It also
suggests that the distinct bursting rates in On versus Off ganglion
cells may result from differences in the amount of glutamatergic drive
originating from On versus Off bipolar cells, respectively. This
potential disparity between afferent On versus Off bipolar drives may
arise from intrinsic differences between these cells; alternatively,
they may be caused by differences in the response of On and Off bipolar
cells to endogenous glutamate release from immature photoreceptors in
the outer plexiform layer (OPL). Although the outer segments of
photoreceptors are immature and the retina is still unresponsive to
ambient light at this stage, glutamatergic ribbon synapses of
photoreceptors are already present in the OPL (Greiner and Weidman,
1981 ) and may be capable of driving postsynaptic bipolar cells. As
such, glutamatergic signaling onto On bipolar cells through the mGluR6
receptor would hyperpolarize these cells. By contrast, Off bipolar
cells, which lack the mGluR6 receptor altogether, will be depolarized
by glutamate released in the OPL. As a result, On bipolar cells may
produce a smaller synaptic output relative to Off bipolar cells,
resulting in a relatively lower bursting rate in On ganglion cells.
Although maturation of the glutamatergic pathway appears to contribute to diversification of On and Off rhythms, changes in the intrinsic physiological properties of ganglion cells also need to be considered (Wang et al., 1997 ).
Our results also show that although Off ganglion cell activity persists
in the presence of APB, it is slightly reduced from that in the
controls (Fig. 9B), indicating that APB does not affect On
ganglion cell bursting solely. It is possible that APB may exert direct
effects on ganglion cells via metabotropic glutamate receptors in
addition to mGluR6 (Duvoisin et al., 1995 ). Other studies however have
suggested that these direct effects may be small (Liets and Chalupa,
1996 ). In addition, rod bipolar cells, which are also hyperpolarized by
APB, may exert an indirect effect on Off ganglion cells via AII
amacrine cells (Kolb and Famiglietti, 1974 ; McGuire et al., 1984 ) that
form inhibitory glycinergic inputs onto Off ganglion cells. Indeed, the
application of APB to mature retina has been found to increase the
maintained discharge in Off ganglion cells, while decreasing that in On
ganglion cells (Bolz et al., 1984). In the present study, we
performed our APB experiments under conditions of glycinergic blockade
that eliminate the indirect contribution of rod bipolar cells to
spontaneous activity in ganglion cells. As such, the effects of APB on
ganglion cell activity described here are unlikely to arise from the
hyperpolarization of rod bipolars. Therefore, despite the possibility
of additional loci for APB effects, we believe that the observed
differences in APB response between On and Off ganglion cells are
attributable primarily to a differential response on the part of On and
Off cone bipolar cells.
Chronic in vivo applications of APB have been demonstrated
to result in structural changes in the dendrites of developing ganglion
cells (Bodnarenko and Chalupa, 1993 ; Bodnarenko et al., 1995 ; Bisti et
al., 1998 ). Thus, an intriguing question that remains is how
spontaneous activity driven by On and Off bipolar signaling contributes
not only to the activity-dependent remodeling of the axonal terminals
of the On and Off ganglion cells but also to the shaping of the
dendritic arbors of these ganglion cells.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 4, 1999; revised Sept. 24, 1999; accepted Oct. 12, 1999.
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the
E. A. and J. Klingenstein Fund. We thank Chris Lee,
Christian Lohmann, Bagirathy Nadarajah, and Rebecca Stacy for helpful
comments and Dennis Oakley for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Rachel O. L. Wong,
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, 660 South Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110. E-mail address:
wongr{at}thalamus.wustl.edu.
 |
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