Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 2, 1633-1643, Copyright © 1982 by Society for Neuroscience
A tonic gamma-aminobutyric acid-mediated inhibition of cholinergic amacrine cells in rabbit retina
SC Massey and DA Redburn
Using the in vivo rabbit eyecup, we have studied the light-evoked release
of acetylcholine (ACh) which is presumed to indicate the activity of
cholinergic amacrine cells. Gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) inhibited the
light-evoked release of ACh (IC50 congruent to 1 mM), but the GABA
antagonists bicuculline (5 micro M) and picrotoxin (20 micro M) potentiated
the light-evoked release and markedly increased the resting release of ACh.
This bicuculline/picrotoxin-evoked release was calcium dependent and the
effects of bicuculline, but not picrotoxin, were blocked by muscimol, a
potent GABA agonist. Muscimol also inhibited the light-evoked release of
ACh (IC50 less than 1 micro M) and was at least 1000 times more potent than
GABA. Nipecotic acid (1 mM), a GABA transport blocker, also inhibited the
light-evoked release of ACh, but the effect was slow in onset and recovery
was prompt. We conclude that the cholinergic amacrine cells of rabbit
retina are inhibited by GABA. The relatively weak action of GABA, compared
to muscimol, may be due to the presence of avid GABA transport systems. We
ascribe the excitatory effects of bicuculline and picrotoxin to the
antagonism of endogenous GABA, suggesting that the cholinergic cells are
influenced by a tonic release of GABA. This is consistent with the effects
of nipecotic acid. Although we are unable to specify the synaptic
arrangements involved, we suggest that the most likely interaction is
directly between GABA amacrine cells and the cholinergic amacrine cells
and/or their presumed bipolar cell inputs.