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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 2000, 20(5):1941-1951
Three Levels of Lateral Inhibition: A Space-Time Study of the
Retina of the Tiger Salamander
Botond
Roska,
Erik
Nemeth,
Laszlo
Orzo, and
Frank S.
Werblin
Division of Neurobiology, Department of Molecular and Cell
Biology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley,
California 94720
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ABSTRACT |
The space-time patterns of activity generated across arrays of
retinal neurons can provide a sensitive measurement of the effects of
neural interactions underlying retinal activity. We measured the
excitatory and inhibitory components associated with these patterns at
each cellular level in the retina and further dissected inhibitory
components pharmacologically. Using perforated and loose patch
recording, we measured the voltages, currents, or spiking at 91 lateral
positions covering ~2 mm in response to a flashed 300-µm-wide bar.
First, we showed how the effect of well known lateral inhibition at the
outer retina, mediated by horizontal cells, evolved in time to compress
the spatial representation of the stimulus bar at ON and OFF bipolar
cell bodies as well as horizontal cells. Second, we showed, for the
first time, how GABAC receptor mediated amacrine cell
feedback to bipolar terminals compresses the spatial representation of
the stimulus bar at ON bipolar terminals over time. Third, we showed
that a third spatiotemporal compression exists at the ganglion cell
layer that is mediated by feedforward amacrine cells via
GABAA receptors. These three inhibitory mechanisms, via
three different receptor types, appear to compensate for the effects of
lateral diffusion of activity attributable to dendritic spread and
electrical coupling between retinal neurons. As a consequence, the
width of the final representation at the ganglion cell level
approximates the dimensions of the original stimulus bar.
Key words:
retina; inhibition; feedback; patch clamp; activity
pattern; GABA
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INTRODUCTION |
The first receptive field
measurements from retinal ganglion cells (Barlow, 1953 ; Kuffler, 1953 )
showed that a central excitatory region was embedded in a larger,
antagonistic surround, providing the first evidence of lateral
inhibition in the retina. Lateral inhibitory components were found in
initial bipolar cell recordings (Werblin and Dowling, 1969 ; Kaneko,
1970 ), suggesting that at least part of the antagonistic effects seen
in ganglion cells were mediated at the outer retina, probably via
horizontal cells. Inhibitory feedback to bipolar cells has also been
measured (Feigenspan et al., 1993 ; Lukasiewicz et al., 1994 ; Dong and
Werblin, 1998 ). This system appears to truncate activity in time, but
its spatial effects remain unknown. Similarly, feedforward inhibition
to ganglion cells has been measured (Werblin, 1972 ; Lukasiewicz and
Werblin, 1990 ; Han et al., 1997 ; Cook and McReynolds, 1998 ; Lukasiewicz and Shields, 1998 ). The spatial extent of the feedforward inhibition has been described (Lukasiewicz and Werblin, 1990 ), but the effect of
this inhibition on the spatial and temporal representation of stimuli
at the ganglion cell layer remains to be determined.
In this study we measured the space-time patterns of activity as each
retinal layer represented the activity of a flashed stimulus bar. We
patch-recorded cellular activity at 91 different lateral positions with
respect to the stimulus, similar to the measurements of Ratliff and
Hartline (1959) , but we followed the full time course of the responses.
With perforated patch (Horn and Marty, 1988 ) and cell-attached
recording (McLarnon, 1991 ; Diamond and Copenhagen, 1993 ), we recorded
membrane voltage and spiking as well as excitatory and inhibitory
patterns of activity. When all 91 recordings were "played back"
synchronously, they generated rich spatiotemporal patterns representing
the 300-µm-wide stimulus bar at each retinal layer.
First, we show how the effect of horizontal cell feedback compresses
the spatial representation of the stimulus, with a similar time course,
at all cellular layers receiving direct input from cones: the ON and
OFF bipolar cells as well as the horizontal cells. Second, we show, for
the first time, that feedback inhibition to bipolar cells via
GABAC receptors does not only act locally to
truncate activity in time (Dong and Werblin, 1998 ) but also conveys
inhibition laterally to compress the spatial representation of the
stimulus across an array of bipolar terminals. Third, we provide
evidence that a feedforward inhibition at GABAA
receptors in a subpopulation of ganglion cells sharpens the spiking
output in both space and time.
These three lateral inhibitory systems, acting at different sites and
via different receptors, appear to reduce the spread of stimulus
representations across arrays of retinal cells caused by finite
dendritic width and cell coupling so that the "neural image" at the
ganglion cell level output still approximates the dimensions of the
original stimulus.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation
Experiments were performed on larval tiger salamander slices at
room temperature as described by Werblin (1978) . The thickness of the
slices was 200-300 µm.
Perforated patch-clamp recording
Light-evoked currents and voltages were recorded with the
perforated patch-clamp technique (Horn and Marty, 1988 ) using
amphotericin (Rae et al., 1991 ). Patch pipettes were pulled from
borosilicate glass tubes (TW120F-4; World Precision Instruments,
Sarasota, FL) on a Flaming-Brown micropipette puller (P-87; Sutter
Instruments, Novato, CA). The pipette resistance was 5-10 M
measured in the control bath solution. The voltage- and current-clamp
recordings were performed with an Axopatch 200B patch-clamp amplifier
(Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). The signal was filtered at 1 or 5 kHz and digitized at 1 kHz (voltage-clamp mode) or 5 kHz (current-clamp mode) by a DT2828 data acquisition board (Data Translation, Marlboro, MA) connected to a Pentium personal computer (PC). The recording software RED was developed by M. Wang in our laboratory. The recorded data were analyzed under Mathematica 3.0 (Wolfram Research, Champaign, IL).
Cell-attached recordings
Spikes from ganglion cells were recorded with the cell-attached
configuration of the patch-clamp technique as described previously (McLarnon, 1991 ; Diamond and Copenhagen, 1993 , 1995 ). Briefly, a loose
seal, 50-500 M , was obtained with pipettes with resistances of 2-5
M . The recorded currents under voltage clamp at 0 mV are proportional to the first derivative of the membrane potential with
respect to time (capacitive current) at the soma of the recorded ganglion cell. Each action potential is represented as a biphasic event
in these recordings.
Bath solution
The control bath solution contained (in mM): 108 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 5 HEPES, and 10 glucose. The pH was
adjusted to 7.8 with NaOH. The blockers were added to the control solution.
Electrode solution
The composition of the patch-electrode solution for cones,
bipolar cells, amacrine cells, and ganglion cells was (in
mM): 101 Kgluconate, 8.5 KCl, 0.0078 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 0.1 BABTAK4, 10 HEPES, 4 ATPNa2, and 0.5 GTPNa3. The
pH was adjusted to 7.4 with KOH. The calculated
ECl was 60 mV.
The composition of the patch-electrode solution for horizontal cells
was (in mM): 59 Kgluconate, 46 KCl, 0.5 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 1.3 BABTAK4, 5 HEPES, 4 ATPNa2,
and 0.5 GTPNa3. The pH was adjusted to 7.4 with
KOH. The calculated ECl was 20 mV.
Cell identification
Cells were identified by their light response and morphology. To
reveal morphology we added 0.5 mg/ml calcein (Molecular Probes, Eugene,
OR) to our electrode solution. Calcein is a fluorescent molecule with
emission spectra similar to that of Lucifer yellow. We used calcein
instead of Lucifer yellow because calcein diffused through the
amphotericin pores whereas Lucifer yellow was trapped in the electrode
pipette. Calcein labeled brightly the measured cell bodies and
processes. We found no evidence of dye coupling. The cells were viewed
using a Nikon mercury fluorescent epi-illuminator (Nikon, Melville, NY)
with an XF15 filter set (Omega Optical, Brattleboro, VT).
All drugs were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) unless otherwise indicated.
The solutions were changed by a gravity-driven perfusion setup with a
3-4 ml/min flow rate at room temperature.
Light stimulus
A color liquid crystal display (LCD) panel (Polaview 1700;
Polaroid Corporation, Cambridge, MA) driven by a Pentium PC was used to
project the stimulus images onto the retinal slice. The stimulus image
was a 300-µm-wide red bar flashed for 1 sec on a green background.
The intensity of the stimulus was 300 µW/mm2, and the intensity of the
background was 13 µW/mm2 throughout all
the recordings. The background intensity was raised to a level to
saturate the rods (Vu et al., 1997 ). The LCD panel was illuminated with
a home-built variable intensity (0-2000 W) lamp. The intensity of the
lamp was spatially homogenous over the area of the display panel. The
image was reduced in size by two achromatic lenses (Edmund Scientific
Co., Barrington, NJ) and was projected to the retinal slice through a
Nikon condenser. The image path was changed by first surface mirrors
and a beam splitter (Edmund Scientific Co.). The image
parameters were controlled by the same software that controlled the
data acquisition (RED; written by Monte Wang).
Space-time pattern reconstruction
According to the idea described in Results, the following
procedure was used to measure the space-time patterns of activity at
the different retinal layers: the 300-µm-wide red bar was flashed every 10 sec in a linear array of 91 locations, separated by 20 µm in
a pseudorandom order. The response to each flash was recorded from a
single cell at the center of the stimulus array, and at the end of the
raster the responses were ordered according to their location and
displayed simultaneously. To record excitatory current patterns, we
voltage-clamped the perforated patch-clamped neuron at 60 mV, the
chloride reversal potential between the pipette and the bath solution.
Under this condition no current flows through GABA- and glycine-gated
chloride channels. Inhibitory current patterns were measured under
voltage clamp at 0 mV, at the reversal potential of glutamate-gated
excitatory currents. Membrane voltage patterns were recorded under
current-clamp mode. Spiking patterns were recorded using the
cell-attached recording technique (described above).
Activity pattern parameters
We used the following parameters to describe quantitatively the
activity patterns in space and time.
Space constant. Each time frame was fit by a Gaussian
function (except in the cone pattern): A *
Exp[ B * (x C)2]. A is the
magnitude of the center response; C is the location of the
center. The space constant ( ) in our study is defined by
(1/B)0.5 minus one-half of the
stimulus width, which was 150 µm. In the case of the cone pattern the
Gaussian approximation was not a good fit. In this case we fitted the
spatial profile with a simple exponential from both sides.
Time to peak. This parameter is defined at each location as
the time needed to reach 90% of the peak response from stimulus ON.
Duration. Duration
(T50) is the time it takes to increase
from 50% of the peak to the peak and then to fall again to 50% of the
peak during light ON.
Sustained-to-peak ratio. The magnitude of the response at
the end of the stimulus is divided by the magnitude of the peak response.
Charge transfer. This parameter is the integral of the
current response during light ON.
Width of the spike pattern at light ON or OFF. This width is
the maximum of the distances between the two most lateral spikes in the
time frames during light ON or OFF.
Data are presented as the mean ± SD.
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RESULTS |
Reconstructing patterns of activity at each retinal layer
We measured patterns of membrane potential, excitatory currents,
and inhibitory currents by recording from a single cell, and in a
series of measurements, we moved the stimulus, a 300-µm-wide bar, to
91 different positions separated by 20 µm across the retinal slice.
The recorded cell served as the representative of each of the cells of
the same type across a row. When all of the recordings were played back
simultaneously, synchronized with the stimulus flash and in proper
spatial order, a spatiotemporal pattern of activity was generated that
approximated the response of a row of cells across 1.8 mm of retina to
a 300-µm-wide flashed bar. The pattern is only an approximation
because this reconstruction technique fails to capture the temporal
correlation between retinal neurons, and depending on the actual
density of neurons, our approximated patterns can be spatially
oversampled or undersampled. The scheme is illustrated for a 10-cell
array in Figure 1.

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Figure 1.
Generating retinal patterns. Right,
The multielectrode array is shown. Pattern recording was with 10 patch
electrodes. The complete pattern is generated by one flash. The
stimulus bar is indicated by the band of
lightly colored cells at the
center of the array. Left, The
multistimulus array recording requires 10 trials with a single
electrode recording from a single cell. For each trial the stimulus is
placed at one of 10 different locations. In the first trial, recording
A is in the same spatial relation to the stimulus as is
recording a from the multielectrode array. In the second
trial, recording B will be in a position corresponding
to that of recording b, and so on. Recordings
F and f are both taken at the
center of the stimulus. When these 10 separate
recordings are played back simultaneously, they generate a 10 line
space-time pattern of cellular activity in space and time similar to
that obtained from the single trial in the multielectrode array.
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Our goal was to reconstruct the excitatory, inhibitory, and membrane
potential activity patterns at several retinal layers in response to
the same 300-µm-wide stimulus bar. By comparing the space-time
characteristics of activity patterns at different retinal layers under
different pharmacological conditions, we attempted to associate
different cell types with specific functions.
The Results section describes the activity patterns at the different
layers in anatomical order, from cones to ganglion cells. This allows
one to read through the figures and follow activity patterns in the
order they are activated in the retina (see Fig. 2 for a simple circuitry).

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Figure 2.
A schematic salamander retina shows some important
cells and their connections to help the reader understand the Results
section. Glyc, Glycine.
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The cone activity pattern serves as an essential control measurement
for the rest of the results presented in this paper. The dynamics and
spatial dimensions of the cone activity pattern define the dimensions
of the neural input to the more proximal retinal layers. Comparing the
activity patterns of the more proximal cells with that of the cone
rather than the stimulus allows us to control for a possible blur of
the stimulus projected onto the retina.
The cone layer activity pattern defines the neural input to
the retina
A representative space-time pattern of membrane voltage at the
cone layer, evoked by a 300-µm-wide bar, is shown in Figure 3A. The spatial extent of the
response pattern closely matched the spatial extent of the stimulus.
The space constant was 33 ± 8 µm (n = 4) at the
peak of the response after stimulus ON and remained constant (Fig.
3B) during the presence of the stimulus. The measured, small
space constant is consistent with the measurements of Attwell et al.
(1984) . The narrow spatial distribution of the cone voltages at the
peak and at the end of the ON response is shown in Figure
3C. The time course of the cone response at a location close
to the center of the stimulus was sustained with a characteristic
overshoot at both stimulus ON and OFF as shown in Figure 3D
(Attwell et al., 1982 ). The sustained-to-peak response amplitude ratio
of the ON response was 0.62 ± 0.06, and the time to peak of the
ON response was 127 ± 12 msec. Rods were saturated with
background illumination (see Materials and Methods), so this cone
pattern defines the space-time input to bipolar and horizontal cells.
Patterns emerging at more proximal retinal layers differ from the cone
pattern in space or time, as a consequence of further retinal
processing.




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Figure 3.
Top left. The space-time pattern of
activity at the cone layer closely matches the stimulus in both space
and time. A, Color-coded space-time plot. The
y-axis represents the spatial locations of a row of 91 retinal cells separated by 20 µm along a 1.82 mm retinal slice. The
x-axis represents time binned in 25 msec intervals. The
stimulus is represented by the red bars.
The horizontal red bar
defines the timing (the stimulus is presented for 1 sec), and the
vertical red bar defines
the spatial extent and position of the stimulus. Each
row represents the time course of the responses of each
of 91 cells positioned at each location along the retinal slice. Each
column represents the spatial distribution of activities
of 91 cells along the retinal slice at a fixed time. The
row marked by the horizontal
arrow is shown in D, and
columns marked by the vertical
arrows are shown in C. The
color code is shown at the
bottom right corner
of the figure. B, The time course of the space constant.
C, The distribution of activities in space at the peak
and at the end of the ON response, marked by vertical
arrows 1 and 2 in
A. D, The time course of the voltage
response at a central location, marked by horizontal
arrow 3 in A.
Figure 4.
Top right. The space-time pattern of
activity at the horizontal cell spreads and contracts over time.
A, A color-coded space-time pattern of membrane voltage
at the horizontal cell layer. The representation of the measurements in
color-coded plots is explained in Figure 1. The convexity indicates a
spread of activity for the first 160 msec. B, The time
course of the space constant. C, The distribution of
activities in space at the peak and at the end of the ON response,
marked by vertical arrows
1 and 2 in A. D, The time
course of the voltage response at a central and a more lateral
location, marked by horizontal arrows 3 and
4 in A.
Figure 5.
Bottom left. The space-time pattern
of activity at the OFF bipolar cell layer shows contraction.
A, A color-coded space-time pattern of excitatory
current at the OFF bipolar cell layer. The representation of the
measurements in color-coded plots is explained in Figure 1.
B, The time course of the space constant.
C, The distribution of activities in space at the peak
and at the end of the ON response, marked by vertical arrows
1 and 2 in A. D, The time course of
the current response at a central location, marked by horizontal
arrow 3 in A.
Figure 6.
Bottom right. The space-time pattern
of activity at the ON bipolar cell layer shows contraction.
A, A color-coded space-time pattern of excitatory
current at the ON bipolar cell layer. The representation of the
measurements in color-coded plots is explained in Figure 1.
B, The time course of the space constant.
C, The distribution of activities in space at the peak
and at the end of the ON response, marked by vertical arrows
1 and 2 in A. D, The time course
of the current response at a central location, marked by
horizontal arrow 3 in A.
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The activity pattern at the horizontal cell layer spreads and
contracts over time
Unlike the very narrow cone pattern, a spatially extensive and
dynamically complex membrane potential activity pattern was evoked by
the 300-µm-wide stimulus at the horizontal cell layer, as shown in
Figure 4A. Just after
light ON, activity originated at the site corresponding to the center
of the stimulus location and spread laterally with an initial speed of
2.2 ± 0.8 µm/msec. This can be read from Figure
4A as the convex shape of the initial response
pattern. The spread of activity is probably mediated by coupling
between horizontal cells (Kolb, 1977 ; Witkovsky et al., 1983 ; Kaneko
and Stuart, 1984 ), because the unilateral spatial extent of the
dendrites of the measured horizontal cells were 170 µm. The
spatiotemporal properties of the activity pattern are determined by the
cable properties and the coupling state of the horizontal cell
syncytium. At 260 ± 20 msec after light ON, activity began to
contract in space (Fig. 4C) and reached a steady-state space
constant of 370 ± 117 µm (n = 9) with a
steady-state-to-peak space constant ratio of 0.8 ± 0.12 (n = 9). This contraction is most probably caused by
feedback from horizontal cells to cones (Baylor et al., 1971 ; Attwell
et al., 1983 ; Wu, 1991 ; Kamermans et al., 1996 ). The spread and
contraction of activity expressed quantitatively by the time course of
the space constant are shown in Figure 4B. The
spatial distribution of the time-to-peak parameter is also consistent
with the lateral diffusion of horizontal cell activity. The time to
peak at central locations, receiving direct input from cones, was
214 ± 57 msec (n = 9). Moving laterally from the
edge of the stimulus, the time-to-peak parameter increased with an
initial rate of 0.13 ± 0.07 msec/µm. Like the activity at light
ON, activity at light OFF also spread laterally. At both stimulus onset
and offset, the time course of the response at a central location (Fig.
4D, trace 3) was characteristically
different from the response at a more lateral location (Fig.
4D, trace 4); the lateral response
started later, was slower, and had smaller amplitude. Our findings
during light ON are consistent with a simple model in which horizontal
cells are coupled and feedback to the cones with a delay. As a result
of this feedback the spatial representation of the stimulus at the
horizontal cell layer becomes more compressed during the development of
the ON response after the early spatial peak. In some measurements this
simple delayed feedback model failed to predict the time course of the
horizontal cell light response at light OFF; the OFF peak of the
horizontal cell light response came before the cone OFF peak at the
central location. Voltage-gated sodium channels in horizontal cells
(Gilbertson et al., 1991 ) might explain this early OFF peak.
Activity patterns at both ON and OFF bipolar cell layers
also display contraction
If the contraction of the activity pattern at the horizontal cell
layer is caused by feedback to cones, bipolar cell layers receiving
direct synaptic input from cones should also display contraction. To
avoid the contribution of chloride-mediated postsynaptic inhibition at
the bipolar cell soma and terminal (Lukasiewicz et al., 1994 ; Dong and
Werblin, 1998 ; Maple and Wu, 1998 ; Roska et al., 1998 ) to the measured
activity pattern at the bipolar cell layer, we voltage-clamped bipolar
cells at the chloride reversal potential
(ECl) of 60 mV. As shown previously
(Lukasiewicz et al., 1994 ; Roska et al., 1998 ) the contribution of
chloride-mediated currents in salamander bipolar cells clamped at or
near ECl is negligible; therefore the
recorded currents at ECl should
reflect only the excitatory input from cones.
Activity pattern at the OFF bipolar cell layer
A characteristic excitatory current pattern at the OFF bipolar
cell layer is shown in Figure
5A. The convexity of the
pattern shows that after light ON activity first spread to reach a
maximum space constant of 150 ± 31 µm and then contracted (Fig.
5B,C) to a space constant of 46 ± 18 µm
(n = 5). The spread of currents is probably caused by
the combination of coupling and finite dendritic trees. The time course
of the response at a central location (Fig. 5D) had a time
to peak of 168 ± 26 msec and a sustained-to-peak ratio of
0.62 ± 0.12 (n = 5). The parameters of the
membrane voltage pattern at the OFF bipolar layer (data not shown) were
similar to the parameters of the excitatory current pattern (maximum
space constant, 156 ± 75 µm; space constant after contraction,
32 ± 35 µm; time to peak, 183 ± 21 msec; and
sustained-to-peak ratio, 0.6 ± 0.1; n = 6). This
suggests that at the OFF bipolar soma direct inhibition does not
significantly shape the space-time pattern under the stimulus
conditions used in this study.
Activity pattern at the ON bipolar cell layer
A characteristic excitatory current pattern at the ON bipolar cell
layer is shown in Figure
6A. After light ON
activity first spread to reach a maximum space constant of 94 ± 48 µm and then contracted (Fig. 6B,C) to a space
constant of 30 ± 21 µm (n = 10). Although the
early response was broader, the steady-state activity pattern in
bipolar cells approximated the spatial dimension of the stimulus. The
time to peak at the central location was 202 ± 25 msec
(n = 10). At light OFF a similar spread and contraction were measured. The membrane voltage pattern (Yang and Wu, 1991 ) displayed a similar but broader spread and contraction; after light ON
the maximum space constant was 254 ± 58 µm, which then declined
to 69 ± 35 µm (n = 7). Two distinct groups of
ON bipolar cell types could be separated on the basis of the
sustained-to-peak ratio of the responses in the time domain (at a
central location). The first group, termed "sustained," had a
sustained-to-peak ratio of 0.65 ± 0.11 (n = 6)
that is very similar to the sustained-to-peak ratios of cone (0.62 ± 0.06) and OFF bipolar (0.62 ± 0.12) responses. The second
group, termed "transient" (Fig. 6D), had a
sustained-to-peak ratio of 0.20 ± 0.09 (n = 11).
The spatial parameters (maximum space constant and space constant after
contraction) of the two groups were statistically nonseparable.
Feedback via GABAC receptors compresses the
representation of the stimulus at bipolar terminals in both space and
time
As the activity patterns formed at the bipolar cell bodies enter
the inner plexiform layer of the retina, they flow through key control
points at the bipolar terminals. It was shown that local feedback from
amacrine cells to bipolar terminals via GABAC receptors truncates the release of glutamate from bipolar cells in
time (Zhang et al., 1997 ; Dong and Werblin, 1998 ). It is not known
however whether this feedback acts only locally or whether it is
mediated from a distance. If it were only local, blocking feedback
should not change the spatial dimensions of the pattern of glutamate
release from the bipolar terminals.
We estimated the space-time activity patterns of glutamate release
from the ON bipolar terminals with and without blocking GABAC receptors. Release was monitored by
measuring excitatory currents during light ON from narrow-field
amacrine cells (selected to have processes of diameter <200 µm)
voltage-clamped to the chloride reversal potential. These cells served
as "glutamate electrodes."
We included 100 µM bicuculline and 10 µM
strychnine in the control bath solution to block all inhibition to
amacrine cells and bipolar cells via GABAA and
glycine receptors, respectively. Under these pharmacological conditions
the recorded amacrine cells received only excitatory currents (data not
shown; n = 8), so clamping these cells to the chloride
reversal potential was an additional safety factor to isolate
glutamate-gated synaptic currents. Most of the narrow-field amacrine
cells receive excitatory input from both ON and OFF bipolar cells
(Roska et al., 1998 ). To ensure that during light ON these amacrine
cells received input only from ON bipolar cells, we applied 100 µM APB, a specific blocker of the ON pathway
(Slaughter and Miller, 1981 ), at the end of each experiment. In all
amacrine cells used as glutamate electrodes, APB completely blocked the
responses during light ON, confirming that these cells received input
exclusively from the ON bipolar system during light ON.
An approximation of the pattern of glutamate release at the ON bipolar
terminal during light ON is shown in Figure
7A. In the presence of
strychnine and bicuculline, when feedback via GABAC receptors was intact, the activity patterns
at the ON bipolar terminal were compact in both space (Fig.
7A) and time (Fig. 7B). These patterns expanded
in both space (Fig. 7C) and time (Fig. 7D) when
GABAC receptors were blocked with 100 µM picrotoxin. The maximum space constant (Fig.
7E), the duration (Fig. 7F), the
time-to-peak (Fig. 7G), and the charge transfer (Fig.
7H) parameters all increased with the blocking of
GABAC receptors in five patterns measured from
different cells.

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Figure 7.
GABAC blockade "blurs" the
activity pattern at the ON bipolar terminal layer in both space and
time. A, A color-coded space-time pattern of excitatory
current at a narrow-field amacrine cell layer during light ON
representing the activity pattern at the ON bipolar terminal layer. The
representation of the measurements in color-coded plots is explained in
Figure 1. The bath solution contained 10 µM strychnine
(S) and 100 µM bicuculline
(B) to help isolate the excitatory synaptic
currents. B, The time course of the response at a
central location, marked by the horizontal arrow in
A. C, The same measurement as in
A but with the GABAC receptors at bipolar
terminals blocked by addition of 100 µM picrotoxin
(PTX) into the bath solution. D,
The time course of the response at a central location, marked by the
horizontal arrow in C.
E-H, The effect of GABAC blockade on the
activity pattern parameters at the ON bipolar terminal layer. The
parameters were determined for five different experimental measurements
of patterns of activities. E1-H1, The effect of
PTX on four pattern parameters during light ON.
E1, Maximum space constant. F1, Duration
(T50) at the central location. G1, Time
(T) to peak at the central location.
H1, Charge transfer at the central location. The
measured patterns are numbered on the x-axes.
White bars represent pattern parameters
measured when GABAC receptors were intact.
Black bars represent pattern parameters
measured when GABAC receptors were blocked by
PTX. E2-H2, A visual guide indicating
how these parameters were determined and what they mean.
E2, The time course of the space constant in a pattern.
The maximum space constants are shown by arrows.
F2-H2, The response at the central location in the same
pattern. Arrows represent T50 in
F2 and time to peak in G2. The charge
transfer parameter is the integral of the current response during light
ON, shown by the shaded area in
H2.
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These experiments strongly suggest that amacrine cell feedback to
bipolar terminals can mediate lateral inhibition and that the spatial
effect of this feedback is to compress the activity at the bipolar
terminals. We cannot determine the exact physiological magnitude of the
spatial compression because to make the measured narrow-field amacrine
cell sensitive only to glutamate our "control" solution contained
bicuculline and strychnine. Under this pharmacological condition the
feedback to bipolar cells is enhanced (Zhang et al., 1997 ; Roska et
al., 1998 ).
Amacrine cell activity patterns
Amacrine cells constitute an extremely diverse population of
inhibitory interneurons (Yang et al., 1991 ; MacNeil and Masland, 1998 )
making synapses with bipolar cells, ganglion cells, and other amacrine
cells in the inner plexiform layer. Most amacrine cells contain either
the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA or glycine or both (Marc et al.,
1995 ). Moreover, recent experiments measuring the temporal correlation
between ganglion cell spiking implied that amacrine cells might be
electrically coupled to ganglion cells and in that context they would
behave as excitatory cells (Brivanlou et al., 1998 ). We have measured
the excitatory and inhibitory current patterns from 30 amacrine cells
and found that the width of the excitatory input patterns closely
correlated with the diameter of the amacrine cell processes (Fig.
8). The excitatory and inhibitory
currents were isolated under control conditions, without
pharmacological blockers, by voltage clamping the measured amacrine
cell to ECl ( 60 mV) and
EGlu (0 mV), respectively. The width
of the inhibitory input patterns was uncorrelated with the diameter of
the amacrine cell processes (Fig. 8), implying that both narrow- and
wide-field amacrine cells can receive either narrow- or wide-field
inhibition.

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Figure 8.
Excitatory and inhibitory input to amacrine cells.
A, The width of the excitatory current pattern is a
monotonically increasing function of the diameter of the amacrine cell
processes. B, The excitatory current pattern to a
narrow-field amacrine cell labeled n in A
is shown. The representation of the measurements in color-coded plots
is explained in Figure 1. C, The excitatory current
pattern to a wide-field amacrine cell labeled w in
A is shown. D, There is no simple
relation between the width of the inhibitory current and the diameter
of the amacrine cell processes. E, A narrow inhibitory
current pattern to a narrow-field amacrine cell labeled
n1 in D is shown. F, A
wide inhibitory current pattern to another narrow-field amacrine cell
labeled n2 in D is shown.
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Feedforward inhibition via GABAA receptors compresses
the spiking pattern at ganglion cells
Ganglion cells receive excitatory input from bipolar cells and
various forms of inhibitory input from amacrine cells (Lukasiewicz and
Werblin, 1990 ; Han et al., 1997 ; Cook and McReynolds, 1998 ; Cook et
al., 1998 ). Ganglion cells consist of four distinctly different cell
classes according to the inhibitory and excitatory inputs they receive
(Wunk and Werblin, 1979 ). The detailed differences between the
space-time activity patterns will be published elsewhere. Here we
focus on one ON-OFF ganglion cell class, which receives a dominant
GABAergic inhibition. ON-OFF ganglion cells were classified into this
category if the inhibitory currents did not change or were increased by
the addition of strychnine. One-third of the measured ON-OFF ganglion
cells (n = 20) belonged to this class. Ganglion cell
spikes were measured by the cell-attached patch technique (McLarnon,
1991 ; Diamond and Copenhagen, 1993 ) that leaves the composition of the
interior of the measured cell intact. Comparison of Figure
9, A and C, shows
that blocking GABAA receptors increased both the
duration and the spatial extent of the spiking pattern in this class of
ganglion cells (n = 6). This "blurring" appears to
be mediated by direct inhibition at ganglion cells. It is known that
ganglion cells receive GABAergic inhibition via GABAA receptors (Lukasiewicz and Werblin, 1990 ;
Cook and McReynolds, 1998 ; Lukasiewicz and Shields, 1998 ). The
inhibitory current patterns (n = 4) mediated by
GABAergic inhibition are shown in Figure 9E. However, the
excitatory current pattern, a measure of bipolar input, to these
ganglion cells does not widen by the application of bicuculline (data
not shown; n = 5). This suggests that the GABAergic
effect is mediated at a site proximal to the bipolar terminals, i.e.,
at the ganglion cell dendrites.

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Figure 9.
Amacrine cell feedforward via GABAA
receptors compresses the spiking pattern at a subpopulation of ganglion
cells in both space and time. A, A space-time pattern
of spikes at a ganglion cell layer during light ON under control
conditions. B, The time course of the response at a
central location, marked by the horizontal
arrow in A. C, A
space-time pattern of spikes from the same ganglion cell layer during
light ON in the presence of 100 µM bicuculline.
D, The time course of the response at a central
location, marked by the horizontal arrow
in C. E, An inhibitory current pattern at
the ganglion cell layer in the presence of strychnine. The
representation of the measurements in color-coded plots is explained in
Figure 1. This pattern can be blocked by bicuculline. F,
The time course of the inhibitory current response at a central
location, marked by the horizontal arrow
in E.
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DISCUSSION |
Measuring the time course of the development of patterns
representing a stimulus square provides a realistic, intuitive view of
the neural images generated at each retinal level. These
patterns represent the changes in time of the dimensions of the neural representations that would exist across a physical array of retinal cells covering 1.8 mm. There are at least three distinct sites of
lateral inhibition, each acting at a different receptor type, where the
spatial representation of the stimulus is compressed in space. By
comparing the space-time patterns at each level we have identified
three new phenomena associated with the three different sites and a
fourth one associated with the spatial distribution of inhibitory and
excitatory input to amacrine cells. These observations are outlined below.
All cells postsynaptic to cones have similar
space-time patterns
We showed that activity patterns at all cellular layers receiving
direct input from cones have common space-time characteristics; after
stimulus onset, the spatial representation expands for ~160 msec and
then contracts (Fig. 10). The expansion
has a wider lateral extent in horizontal than in bipolar cells probably
because of greater coupling between neighboring horizontal cells. The
contraction is probably mediated by inhibitory feedback from horizontal
cells to cones. This notion is supported by the fact that excitatory current patterns in both ON and OFF bipolar cells, which reflect only
the input from cones, display contraction. Kaneko and Tachibana (1986) proposed that GABAA receptors mediate
feedback inhibition in the turtle. This notion was supported by Wu
(1991) in the salamander. Several other papers proposed however that
the feedback inhibition in salamander might not be mediated by
ionotropic GABA receptors (Hare and Owen, 1996 ; Savchenko et al.,
1997 ). Hare and Owen (1996) showed that the antagonistic surround in
salamander bipolar cells could not be eliminated either by bicuculline
or picrotoxin, implying that the receptor for the feedback inhibition
is neither a GABAA nor
GABAC type. Moreover it was shown in the goldfish
that the feedback directly regulates Ca2+
concentration (Verweij et al., 1996 ) without changing the cone voltage.
Our results that the cone voltage pattern does not display contraction
and bicuculline does not block the spatial contraction in bipolar cells
(result not shown) are consistent with the findings of Hare and Owen
(1996) and Verweij et al. (1996) . However our measurements could not
exclude the contribution of an ionotropic GABAergic feedback (Wu, 1991 )
because our method of approximating the space-time patterns might have
not been sensitive enough to measure small changes of space constants,
especially in cones where the signal-to-noise ratio in our measurement
was low. Moreover it is possible that small variations of voltage at
the terminal caused by GABAA feedback could not
be measured from the inner segment, the location of our patch
electrode.

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Figure 10.
Comparison of the characteristic time courses of
space constants in a horizontal cell, an ON bipolar cell, an OFF
bipolar cell, and a cone. The shape of the space constant-time
functions during light ON is similar in horizontal cells, OFF bipolar
cells, and ON bipolar cells; the space constant increases for ~160
msec and then decreases and reaches a steady-state value. The space
constant of the cone voltage pattern is not changed over time.
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GABAC feedback inhibition to bipolar terminals
compresses the neural representation in space as well as in time
Blocking GABAC receptors caused a massive
spatial blur in the activity patterns at bipolar terminals (Fig. 7).
GABAC receptors (Feigenspan et al., 1993 ; Qian
and Dowling, 1993 ; Lukasiewicz and Werblin, 1994 ; Lukasiewicz et al.,
1994 ) are localized at bipolar terminals in the tiger salamander
(Lukasiewicz and Werblin, 1994 ; Lukasiewicz et al., 1994 ) and were
shown to truncate activity at bipolar terminals in time (Zhang et al.,
1997 ; Dong and Werblin, 1998 ). Our results indicate that amacrine
cell-mediated feedback inhibition to bipolar cells via
GABAC receptors not only acts locally to truncate
activity in time (Dong and Werblin, 1998 ) but also conveys inhibition
laterally to compress the spatial representation of the stimulus across
an array of bipolar terminals.
GABAA feedforward inhibition compresses the neural
representation in ganglion cells
Blocking GABAA-mediated inhibition with
bicuculline blurs the spiking representation of the stimulus in both
space and time in a subpopulation of ON-OFF ganglion cells (Fig. 9),
which received a dominant postsynaptic GABAergic inhibition via
GABAA receptors. One-third of the measured
ON-OFF ganglion cells were classified into this subpopulation. The
spatiotemporal blurring effect of GABAA blockage
must be feedforward because bicuculline did not widen the excitatory
input pattern (a measure of bipolar terminal activity) to these
ganglion cells. This suggests that the spatial representation of the
visual stimulus is sharpened by a feedforward amacrine cell class via
GABAA receptors. Dong and Werblin (1998) measured
voltage from ON-OFF ganglion and found that in 3 out of 11 cells
"bicuculline enhanced the voltage responses slightly." In our case
in one-third of the ON-OFF ganglion cells bicuculline had a marked
effect on the spiking pattern. The difference may depend on the
measurement techniques; Dong and Werblin (1998) measured voltage in the
whole-cell patch mode. In whole-cell patch mode we observed a rundown
of inhibitory currents but not of excitatory currents. That means that
in whole-cell patch mode the voltage measurement tends to emphasize the
excitatory input but not the physiological combination of inhibitory
and excitatory inputs. We measured the spiking output in the ON cell
patch mode, which allows us to measure the spiking output without
decreasing the contribution of inhibition. Also the currents were
measured with the perforated patch technique that prevents the rundown
of the inhibitory currents.
Relationship between spatial representation and process spread in
amacrine cells
Figure 8 shows that the width of the excitatory input pattern to
amacrine cells correlates well with the width of the amacrine cell
processes. This is consistent with the study of Bloomfield and Xin
(1997) in rabbits showing that the receptive field size of amacrine
cells correlates well with the diameter of their processes. A study of
Cook and Werblin (1994) implied that wide-field amacrine cells receive
excitatory input only through their proximal processes. Our results can
be interpreted in two different ways. Either wide-field amacrine cells
receive excitatory inputs along the entire length of their processes,
or they receive excitatory input only through their proximal processes,
but coupling to other amacrine cells increases their receptive field
size. In either case the spatial representation of objects at the
excitatory input of wide-field amacrine cells is much wider than is the
object itself. The width of the inhibitory input to amacrine cells
cannot be predicted by the extent of the amacrine cell processes. It is
possible that a very precise, cell type-specific wiring exists between
amacrine cells, but the rules for this connectivity cannot be inferred from these measurements.
The use of pattern measurements to define retinal function
To study the spatiotemporal dynamics at the different layers we
used a technique first introduced by Ratliff and Hartline (1959) in
Limulus and then used by others (Kirschfeld and Reichardt, 1964 ; Baumgartner, 1965 ) to define the spatial pattern generated by an
edge because of lateral interactions in vertebrate vision. We extended
the technique to study the development of responses over time. This
technique allows us to view the spread and contraction of "neural
activity" over time as each retinal array generates its
representation of the stimulus. Neural activity patterns can be
measured for excitatory (Figs. 5A, 6A) and
inhibitory (Fig. 9E) currents. Alternatively cellular
response can be measured as changes in membrane potential (Figs.
3A, 4A) or as spike activity (Fig.
9A,C). The measured patterns are only approximations for the
true behavior of a given cell population because our reconstruction method assumes that every cell within a certain cell population has
exactly the same space-time response properties, ignoring possible
gradual changes in response properties with position across the retina.
We cannot make any inferences about the density of the cell type, nor
can we measure the correlation between activity among cells in the
array (Brivanlou et al., 1998 ). Despite these limitations, the measured
patterns provide valuable insights about the space-time dynamics of
arrays of each cell type in the different cell layers and their
image-processing roles in shaping the neural representation of the
visual scene.
The representation depends on background light intensity
The receptive field organization changes significantly under
different background illuminations (Kuffler, 1953 ; Barlow et al.,
1957 ); the receptive field "contracts" with increasing background illumination. Similar dark-to-light changes are seen in retinal patterns. Jacobs and Werblin (1998) measured the extracellular pattern
of spike activity evoked by a 300 × 300 µm square at the ganglion cell level. The patterns they recorded were significantly different from the patterns recorded in this study; the flashed square
evoked a dynamically expanding pattern that extended well beyond the
dimensions of the stimulus. Two conditions might explain the
differences. First, Jacobs and Werblin (1998) used little or no
background illumination; second, their stimulus was presented by a
monitor generating stimulus intensities 2 log units less bright than
that in this study using a high-intensity lamp-LCD panel combination.
Our background intensity (13 µW/mm2) was
brighter than their stimulus intensity (0.5-5
µW/mm2). Under the conditions used by
Jacobs and Werblin (1998) the rod system was probably active. By
comparison, under our conditions the rods were saturated (Vu et al.,
1997 ), and only the cone system was responsive. Therefore it seems
likely that the differences of the recorded patterns are caused by the
differences of rod response- versus cone response-dominated retinas.
Indeed we have directly measured the spiking patterns from several
ganglion cells in the whole-mount retina preparation with no background
illumination and with the background illumination used in this study.
We found that the spatial representation is significantly compressed by elevating background illumination (data not shown). The change in the
functional architecture of the retina under different background illuminations remains to be explored.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 13, 1999; revised Nov. 10, 1999; accepted Dec. 10, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant EY00561.
We thank Mark Bieda for helping with the cell-attached patch-clamp
technique. We also thank Divya Chander and Greg Maguire for
recommending the use of the fluorescent dye calcein.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Frank Werblin, 145 LSA, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720. E-mail: werblin{at}socrates.berkeley.edu.
 |
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