Abstract
We studied the retinal rod pathway of Carollia perspicillata and Glossophaga soricina, frugivorous microbats of the phyllostomid family. Protein kinase Cα (PKCα) immunolabeling revealed abundant rod bipolar cells (RBCs) with axon terminals in the innermost sublamina of the inner plexiform layer (IPL), which is typical for mammals. Extraordinarily, the RBC axons showed additional synaptic contacts in a second sublamina further out in the IPL. Dye injections of PKCα-prelabeled RBCs of C. perspicillata confirmed the bistratified axon morphology. The functional partition of the IPL into ON and OFF sublayers was shown by using antibodies against vesicular glutamate transporter 1 [labeling all ON and OFF bipolar cell (BC) axon terminals] and G-protein γ13 (labeling all ON BCs). The ON sublayer occupied 75% of the IPL thickness, including both strata of the RBC axons. RBC output onto putative AII amacrine cells (ACs), the crucial interneurons of the rod pathway, was identified by calretinin, PKCα, and CtBP2 triple immunolabeling. Dye injections of calretinin-prelabeled ACs revealed tristratification of the AII ACs corresponding to the bistratified RBCs. Triple immunolabeling for PKCα, nitric oxide synthetase (NOS), and either GABAC or CtBP2 indicated GABAergic feedback onto RBCs via NOS-immunoreactive ACs. AII output analysis showed glycineric synapses with glycine receptor α1 expression between AII cells and OFF cone BCs and connexin 36-labeled gap junctions between AII cells and ON cone BCs. We conclude that microbats have a well developed rod pathway with great similarities to that of other mammals, but with an unusual IPL stratification pattern of RBCs and AIIs.
Introduction
The eyes of microchiropteran bats are small, and their retinae are rod dominated (Müller et al., 2009). Whereas microbats are able to orient at complete darkness by echolocation, vision plays an important role during their flights between daytime roosts and feeding grounds and during migration over longer distances (Griffin, 1970; Suthers, 1970; for review, see Eklöf, 2003). At dusk and dawn and on brightly moonlit nights, many bat species use visual cues for long-range orientation and navigation. Vision also plays a role in predator avoidance and prey detection (Altringham and Fenton, 2003; Eklöf and Jones, 2003). Glossophaga soricina and Carollia perspicillata are phyllostomid microbats feeding on fruit, nectar, or pollen. Compared with insectivorous microbats, frugivorous microbats have larger eyes and larger visual brain regions (Barton et al., 1995; Barton and Harvey, 2000).
In mammals, scotopic vision is mediated by rod photoreceptors and photopic vision by cone photoreceptors. Rods and cones are contacted by distinct types of bipolar cells (BCs) that can be subdivided into several morphological types of cone BCs and one type of rod bipolar cell (RBC) (Ghosh et al., 2004). Functionally, BCs are subdivided into ON and OFF BCs according to their light response (Saito, 1987); the RBC is an ON cell (Dacheux and Raviola, 1986).
All RBCs studied to date have a similar morphology with axons that run through the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and end in large lobular terminals at the border of the IPL and ganglion cell layer (Ramón y Cajal, 1893). Cone BCs contact ganglion cells directly, whereas RBCs use an intermediary. They synapse onto a narrow-field bistratified amacrine cell (AC), the AII AC (Famiglietti and Kolb, 1975), that in turn forms glycinergic chemical synapses with OFF cone BCs and gap junctions with ON cone BCs (Strettoi et al., 1992), transferring signals of opposite polarity to ON and OFF ganglion cells.
Microchiropteran bats have, in addition to a majority of rods, a significant cone population (2–5%) and hence the basis for daylight and color vision (Müller et al., 2009). However, nothing is known about bat BCs, and only certain types of ACs have been described up to now. Dopaminergic and GABAergic ACs were found in four phyllostomid species (Studholme et al., 1987). Furthermore, in the greater horseshoe bat, AII-like ACs were labeled by antisera against calcium-binding proteins (Jeon et al., 2007). The existence of AII cells suggests that the bat retina possesses the typical constituents of the mammalian rod pathway.
The aim of the present study was to elucidate whether the phylogenetically old clade of bats indeed has such a typical mammalian rod pathway. We revealed the morphology of bat RBCs and AII ACs by immunocytochemistry and intracellular dye injections. The synaptic contacts of RBCs with AII cells and of AII cells with OFF and ON cone BCs were identified by immunolabeling. The results indicate a conventional mammalian rod pathway, but they also reveal a unique peculiarity in the morphology and connectivity of bat RBCs that may be of significance for retinal performance during nocturnal vision.
Materials and Methods
Tissue preparation
We examined adults of either sex of the phyllostomid bat species C. perspicillata (n = 13) and G. soricina (n = 2). Animals came from breeding colonies at Goethe University (Frankfurt/Main, Germany) and at Friedrich-Alexander University (Erlangen, Germany). Animals were deeply anesthetized by isoflurane (CuraMED Pharma) and decapitated. The eyes were enucleated, and the anterior part was removed. All procedures for animal handling and killing complied with the NIH Principles of Laboratory Animal Care and the corresponding German laws.
For immunocytochemistry on cryostat sections, the posterior eyecup was immersion fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PA) in 0.1 m phosphate buffer (PB; pH 7.4) for 15 or 30 min at room temperature. After washing in PB, either the isolated retina or the whole eyecup was cryoprotected in graded sucrose solutions (10, 20, and 30% in PB) and frozen in embedding medium (Jung). Vertical sections (14-l6 μm) were cut and collected on superfrost slides.
For intracellular dye injections of RBCs and AII ACs, enucleated eyes were transferred to oxygenated Ames medium (Sigma-Aldrich) and opened by an encircling cut. The retina was separated from pigment epithelium and sclera, embedded in 2% low melting agar (2-hydroxymethyl agarose, A4018; Sigma-Aldrich), mounted on a vibratome (D.S.K. Microslicer, DTK-1000; Ted Pella), and cut into 150 μm sections. After another 10 min in Ames medium, sections were fixed in 4% PA in PB at 4°C for 15 min. Subsequently, they were transferred to PB, processed for free-floating immunocytochemistry, and fixed for another 30 min in 4% PA.
Immunocytochemistry
Antibodies.
For labeling RBCs, three different antibodies against protein kinase Cα (PKCα) were used. They were raised in rabbit (1:10,000, P4334; Sigma-Aldrich), mouse (1:100, K01107M; Meridian Life Science), and goat (1:1000, sc-208-G; Santa Cruz Biotechnology). For labeling ribbon synapses, a rabbit antiserum against the C-terminal binding protein-2 (CtBP2) was used (1:4000, catalog #193 003; Synaptic Systems). For labeling AII ACs, rabbit anti-calretinin (1:2000, PV-28; Swant) and mouse anti-calretinin (1:1000, MAB1568; Millipore) were used. For labeling a subset of OFF and ON cone BCs, rabbit anti-recoverin (1:2000, AB5585; Millipore) was used. ON BCs were labeled with rabbit antiserum against G-protein γ13 (Gγ13) (1:1000; kind gift from R. F. Margolskee, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY). BC axon terminals were immunostained with guinea pig anti-vesicular glutamate transporter 1 (vGluT1) (1:50,000, AB5905; Millipore). ACs containing nitric oxide synthetase (NOS) were labeled by rabbit anti-NOS (1:2000, N 7280; Sigma-Aldrich). Cholinergic ACs were labeled by goat anti-choline acetyltransferase (ChAT; 1:200, AB144P; Millipore). A mouse monoclonal antibody against glycine receptor α1 subunit was used (1:100, mAb2b; kind gift from H. Betz, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt, Germany). A rabbit polyclonal antiserum against the GABAC receptor ρ1 subunit was used (1:100) (Enz et al., 1996). For labeling gap junctions, rabbit anti-connexin 36 (Cx36; 1:100, 36-4600; Zymed) and mouse anti-connexin 36 (1:100, 37-4600; Zymed) were used.
Tissue processing.
Cryostat sections were preincubated in PB containing 10% normal donkey serum (NDS), 1% bovine serum albumin, and 0.5% Triton X-100 for 1 h. Antibodies were diluted in PB containing 3% NDS and 0.5% Triton X-100. Sections were incubated overnight in primary antibodies, followed by a wash and a 1 h incubation in secondary antibodies that were conjugated to Alexa 488 (Invitrogen), Cy3, or Cy5 (Dianova). After a final wash, sections were coverslipped with Aqua-Poly/Mount (Polysciences Europe). For double and triple immunolabeling, the respective primary and secondary antibodies were applied as a mixture. For triple labeling with PKCα (ms), NOS (rb), and either GABAC (rb) or CtBP2 (rb), it was necessary to use two primary antibodies of the same species. In this case, cryosections were first incubated with the NOS antibody at a dilution too low for direct detection by a secondary antibody (1:200,000 instead of 1:2000). The staining was visualized by a secondary antibody raised in goat and a tertiary donkey anti-goat antibody carrying the same fluorophore. After the application of the secondary and tertiary antibodies, a mixture of the other two primary antibodies was applied, and the antibody labeling was performed as described above.
For prelabeling of vibratome sections, antibodies were diluted in PB containing 3% NDS and 0.3% Tween. The incubation time for primary and secondary antibodies was 1 h each, with three washes in PB after each incubation step.
Intracellular injections of DiI
For intracellular injections of individual RBCs and AII ACs with the fluorescent lipophilic tracer DiI (D-282; Invitrogen), using the method of Kao and Sterling (2003), retinal slices were mounted in the injection chamber and fixed by the nylon strings of a “micro-harp.” Sharp microelectrodes were pulled from borosilicate glass tubing (Hilgenberg) and filled with 0.5% DiI solution in 100% ethanol. The dye was injected into PKCα-prelabeled BCs and calretinin-prelabeled ACs with 1 nA positive current for 3 min. After injection, slices were kept in PB at 4°C overnight for diffusion of the dye into the fine processes. Injected slices were mounted on glass slides and coverslipped with Aqua-Poly/Mount, and filled cells were analyzed by confocal microscopy.
Microscopic analysis
Some fluorescent specimens were viewed with an Axioplan 2 microscope equipped with epifluorescence (Carl Zeiss). Micrographs were taken using a CCD camera and the Zeiss Axiovision LE software. Confocal images were taken using either a Zeiss LSM 5 Pascal or an Olympus FV1000 confocal microscope, both equipped with argon and HeNe lasers. High-resolution scanning of image stacks was performed with a Plan-Apochromat 63×/1.40 (Zeiss) or aUPlanSApo 60×/1.35 (Olympus) oil-immersion objective, respectively, at 1024 × 1024 pixels and a z-axis increment of 0.3 μm. For analysis of injected cells, a stack of 12–30 sections was taken (1 μm z-axis step size). The cell's contacts were analyzed by scrutinizing the individual sections. The neurites were reconstructed by collapsing the stacks into a single plane. Brightness and contrast of the final images were adjusted using Adobe Photoshop CS2.
Results
Bistratified morphology of rod bipolar cells
RBCs were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and dye injections. We used PKCα as a common marker for RBCs (Greferath et al., 1990) to label retinal sections of the phyllostomid microbat species C. perspicillata and G. soricina. PKCα-labeled cryostat sections showed an abundant population of immunoreactive RBCs (Fig. 1A,C). The somata were closely packed in the outer half of the inner nuclear layer (INL). The dendrites densely branched in the outer plexiform layer (OPL); the axons ran through the entire IPL and terminated in characteristic club-shaped varicose swellings in sublaminae S4 and S5. A second layer of axonal swellings was obvious in sublamina S2 of the IPL. Close examination with high-power light microscopy indicated a single type of PKCα-immunoreactive (ir) BCs.
Intracellular injections of BCs with the fluorescent dye DiI in unlabeled vertical slices of microbat retina frequently revealed BCs with the morphology of PKCα-ir cells and varicose axon terminals in S4 and S5 (Fig. 1E,F). The axons had clear additional varicosities in S2, either directly within the axon or at the end of a short branch. DiI injections in vertical slices pre-labeled with PKCα antiserum confirmed the bistratified morphology of the bat RBCs (Fig. 1G–K). In all cases the double-labeled bipolar cells showed varicosities in S4 and S5 as well as in S2. DiI-injected bipolar cells had a bushy dendritic tree in the OPL that extended to the outer nuclear layer (ONL; Fig. 1H,J). This indicates the innervation of numerous rod spherules and is a conspicuous feature of mammalian RBCs.
ON/OFF subdivision of the IPL
The IPL usually is subdivided into five bands of equal thickness. In mouse retina and several other species, the OFF sublayer includes S1 and S2 and the ON sublayer includes S3–S5 (Ghosh et al., 2004). Gγ13 and vGluT1 antibodies are common markers to reveal the functional subdivision of the IPL; Gγ13 labels all ON BCs, and vGlut1 labels all ON and OFF BC axon terminals (Huang et al., 2003; Ghosh et al., 2004; Puller et al., 2011). Figure 2A shows vGluT1 immunostaining in the microbat retina. BC axon terminals were evenly distributed throughout the IPL with the exception of a narrow sparsely labeled horizontal band in S2. Double immunostaining with PKCα (Fig. 2B,C) identified the large RBC varicosities close to the ganglion cell layer. The second layer of PKCα-ir varicosities coincided with vGluT1 staining in S2. Next, we labeled for PKCα and Gγ13 (Fig. 2E–K). All PKCα-ir varicosities and terminals in S2, S4 and S5 were Gγ13 immunoreactive and thus are ON BC terminals (Fig. 2I–K). The full extent of the IPL was revealed by differential interference contrast (DIC; Fig. 2H) showing that the OFF sublayer takes up only 25% of the IPL (S1) and the ON sublayer takes up the remaining 75% of the IPL (S2–S5).
Tristratified morphology of AII amacrine cells
Mammalian AII amacrine cells usually have a bistratified morphology with distinct lobular appendages in the OFF sublayer of the IPL and finer arboreal dendrites in the ON sublayer (Vaney et al., 1991). AIIs are glycinergic ACs and contain calretinin in several species, including primates (Wässle et al., 1995), rabbits (Massey and Mills, 1999), and bats (Jeon et al., 2007). Therefore, we assessed the morphology of the microbat AII amacrine cells by DiI injections in vertical slices that were prelabeled for calretinin (Fig. 3A–C). In all cases, the DiI-injected ACs showed a tristratified morphology, i.e., dendrites of lobular appearance in S1 and finer dendrites running parallel to the retinal layers in S2 and S4 plus S5 (Fig. 3B). Figure 3E shows calretinin immunolabeling in C. perspicillata not only in AII cells but also in horizontal cells and one ganglion cell. Double labeling for calretinin and PKCα revealed all PKCα-ir varicosities in close contact with calretinin-ir processes (Fig. 3F). To reveal whether AII cells receive synaptic input from RBCs via glutamatergic ribbon synapses, vertical sections were triple immunolabeled for calretinin, PKCα, and CtBP2 (Fig. 3G–I). CtBP2 labels the presynaptic ribbons within the axon terminals (Jusuf et al., 2006) and occurs in Figure 3G as punctate labeling that is colocalized with the PKCα-ir varicosities in S2 and S4 plus S5 of the IPL. Additional labeling with calretinin revealed the ribbons in PKCα-ir varicosities next to their contact sites with the AII dendrites in S2 and S4 plus S5 (Fig. 3I).
Glycine receptors are associated with AII processes and OFF cone bipolar cells
The glycine receptor α1 subunit (GlyRα1) is expressed at the glycinergic synapses between AII ACs and OFF cone BCs (Sassoé-Pognetto et al., 1994; Grünert and Wässle, 1996). Similar to other mammalian retinae, GlyRα1 immunoreactivity in the microbat was found in large synaptic puncta in the outer IPL and smaller ones in the inner IPL (Fig. 4A,C). Double labeling for GlyRα1 and calretinin further validated the identification of microbat AII cells (Fig. 4C,D). The GlyRα1-ir puncta were localized mostly in S1 of the IPL (Fig. 4C). Several calretinin-ir varicose processes also were present in S1 of the IPL, resembling the typical morphology of AII lobular appendages. Superposition of the labels showed a close association between the GlyRα1 puncta and AII dendrites in the OFF sublayer (Fig. 4D). Next, we looked for cone BCs by immunolabeling for the calcium binding protein recoverin. Recoverin is a reliable marker for subsets of OFF and ON cone BCs in several species (Milam et al., 1993; Massey and Mills, 1996; Cuenca et al., 2002). In the microbat retina, there was a recoverin-ir population of OFF cone BCs stratifying in S1, and there were recoverin-ir axon terminals of ON bipolar cells in S4/S5 (Fig. 4E,K). Double labeling with PKCα and recoverin (Fig. 4F) showed no colocalization of the two markers, arguing for at least two cone BC types labeled by recoverin, an ON and an OFF cone BC. Triple labeling for recoverin, GlyRα1 and calretinin showed that the GlyRα1 puncta in S1 were closely associated with the recoverin-labeled OFF cone BC axon terminals (Fig. 4G) and AII dendrites (Fig. 4H). This supports the assumption that glycinergic transmission between AII ACs and OFF cone BCs is mediated by the GlyRα1 subunit also in the rod pathway of the bat retina.
Connexin 36 is associated with AII processes and ON cone bipolar cells
Electrical synapses between AII AC dendrites and ON cone BCs are a well established feature in mammals (Strettoi et al., 1992; Mills and Massey, 1995). Through these gap junctions, the AII ACs transmit light-ON signals to the ON cone BCs for further transmission to the ON ganglion cells. Cx36 was shown to be essential for transmission of the RBC ON signal from AII ACs to ON cone BCs (Deans et al., 2002). The AII ACs also are coupled among each other via Cx36-expressing gap junctions (Feigenspan et al., 2001; Deans et al., 2002). In the microbat retina, Cx36 labeling revealed gap junctions between calretinin-ir AII AC dendrites and recoverin-ir ON cone BC axon terminals in S4/S5 (Fig. 4I–M). Some of the Cx36-ir puncta at the AII cells in Figure 4J probably represent AII–AII junctions, but the Cx36-ir puncta at ON cone BC dendrites (Fig. 4K,M) indicate that some of them are AII–BC junctions. Hence, we assume that this part of the rod pathway also exists in the microbat retina.
GABAergic amacrine cells as potential synaptic partners of RBCs
Since most amacrine cell contacts onto RBCs in mammalian retinae are GABAergic (Kim et al., 1998), we assessed whether microbat RBCs also express the ρ subunit of the GABAC receptor. The GABAC receptor staining was homogeneously distributed throughout the IPL (Fig. 5A). In double-labeled vertical sections, PKCα-ir RBCs were decorated by many GABAC-ir puncta, representing synaptic localization of the ρ subunit (Fig. 5C,D). Many of the puncta were grouped into aggregates (Fig. 5C), and these aggregates were in register with axonal varicosities of PKCα-ir RBCs (Fig. 5D). In search for ACs using GABA as one of their transmitters, we labeled for NOS- and ChAT-expressing ACs (Fig. 5E–H). Double immunolabelings for PKCα in combination with ChAT or NOS should reveal how close the association between axonal varicosities of PKCα-ir RBCs and GABAergic AC processes is. Since the dendrites of the ChAT-ir ACs stratified in S1 and S3, there was no overlap with the PKCα-ir RBC axon terminals (Fig. 5G). Dendrites of NOS-ir ACs stratified at three levels in the IPL with two prominent strata located in S2 and S4 plus S5 and a finer one in S1 (Fig. 5E). Therefore, several NOS-ir profiles could be detected in close association with PKCα-ir RBC axon terminals in S2 and S4 plus S5 (Fig. 5H), which makes GABAergic input onto RBCs very likely.
To further prove GABAergic input onto RBC axon terminals, we performed triple immunolabeling for PKCα, GABAC, and NOS (Fig. 6A–C″). Double immunolabeling with GABAC and NOS (Fig. 6B–B″) revealed GABAC-ir puncta in close association with NOS-ir profiles in S2 and S4 plus S5. In the merge (Fig. 6C–C″), aggregates of PKCα-, GABAC-, and NOS-labeled profiles are obvious (arrows), making GABAergic input from NOS-ir ACs onto RBCs very likely. Triple immunolabeling for PKCα, CtBP2, and NOS (Fig. 6D–F″) showed that GABAergic input onto RBCs is very close to ribbon synapses and therefore may represent feedback synapses. In the merge (Fig. 6F–F″), numerous ribbons in RBC axon terminals in S2 and S4 plus S5 of the IPL (arrows) are closely associated with NOS-ir profiles, indicating RBC input. This is an arrangement not described in other mammals so far (Chun et al., 1999; Oh et al., 1999).
Figure 7 summarizes the rod pathway in the microbat retina schematically. Under scotopic conditions, the RBCs are stimulated (depolarized) by light and transmit this signal by glutamate onto AII ACs in the ON sublayer of the IPL, both in S2 and S4 plus S5. This ON signal is transmitted by the AII cells via sign-conserving gap junctions onto ON cone BCs, which in turn are (very likely) connected to ON center ganglion cells. In parallel, the AII cells also feed the ON signal via sign-inverting glycinergic inhibitory synapses onto OFF cone BCs in S1, which in turn are (very likely) connected to OFF center ganglion cells. Additionally, the RBCs get GABAergic inhibitory input in the IPL, for example, via NOS amacrine cells at various strata in the ON sublayer.
Discussion
Bistratified morphology of rod bipolar cells in the microbat retina
The nocturnal microchiropteran bats are most famous for their echolocation, but vision also is an important sense for them (for review, see Eklöf, 2003).The eyes of microbats are small, and their retinae are rod dominated (Müller et al., 2009). Here we show that phyllostomid microbats also possess the two crucial elements of the mammalian rod pathway, rod bipolar cells and AII amacrine cells.
By PKCα immunostaining and DiI injections, we revealed the morphology of RBCs in microbat retina with their unusual bistratified axon terminal system (Fig. 1). We showed that RBC output occurs at both axonal levels in the IPL by identifying ribbon-containing presynaptic sites within the axonal varicosities of the PKCα-labeled cells (Fig. 3G). This is unique among eutherian (placental) mammalian RBCs. The brushtail possum, a marsupial, also was shown to have eutherian-like monostratified RBCs (Young and Vaney, 1990). The same study described a multistratified PKCα-ir BC in the echidna, a prototherian (egg-laying) mammal. It remains to be shown whether this, in fact, is a RBC. There are the rare exceptions of bistratified cone bipolar cell types in primates and ground squirrels (Mariani, 1983; Linberg et al., 1996). In the retina of nonmammalian vertebrates, bistratified or even multistratified BCs are more common, but there is no homolog of the mammalian RBC among them [carp (Scholes, 1975), turtle (Ammermüller and Kolb, 1995)].
The functional partition of the IPL into structurally separated ON and OFF sublayers can be visualized by vGluT1 and Gγ13 immunocytochemistry (Ghosh et al., 2004). In the retina of C. perspicillata, Gγ13 immunoreactivity labeled the inner 75% of the IPL thickness (S2–S5; Fig. 2), leaving only 25% for the OFF sublayer. All PKCα-ir varicose axon terminals were located within the Gγ13-ir ON sublayer of the IPL (Fig. 2I–K). Hence, the output of the microbat's bistratified RBCs is confined to the ON sublayer, which is consistent with the general rule that mammalian RBCs are functional ON cells. The 25% versus 75% OFF/ON partition of the microbat's IPL is very unusual among mammals. In mouse (Ghosh et al., 2004) and rabbit (McGillem and Dacheux, 2001), the OFF sublayer makes up 40% of the IPL; in monkey, it makes up 45% (Grünert et al., 1994). Rod-to-cone ratios in microbat and mouse retinae are comparable [microbats, 2–5% (Müller et al., 2009); mouse, 3% (Jeon et al., 1998)], and both are nocturnal species. Possibly the requirements of night vision and orientation tasks during nocturnal flights may have favored a more complex processing of ON signals in the IPL of the microbat retina.
Tristratified AII amacrine cells as postsynaptic partners of bistratified rod bipolar cells
A crucial element in the mammalian rod pathway is the bistratified AII amacrine cell that receives input from the RBC and makes output onto ON and OFF cone BCs (for review, see Bloomfield and Dacheux, 2001). Antibodies against calretinin label AII ACs in rabbit (Massey and Mills, 1999) and macaque (Wässle et al., 1995). Recently, a study in the microbat Rhinolophus ferrumequinum showed calretinin-ir ACs with typical AII-like morphology (Jeon et al., 2007). Our calretinin labeling in C. perspicillata showed a similar pattern, and DiI injections revealed a tristratified morphology of the AII cells with lobular appendages in S1 and finer dendrites stratifying in S2 and S4 plus S5 (Fig. 3A–C). We identified ribbon-containing output synapses of RBCs onto the putative AII cells by confocal imaging and found evidence for numerous synaptic contacts between the two cell types at both AII stratification levels within the ON sublayer of the IPL (Fig. 3H,I). Since this morphology was found consistently throughout the retina it does not represent odd ectopic synaptic contacts but the blueprint of the microbat retina. Obviously, the ON signaling of RBCs onto ON cone BCs via the AII ACs is strengthened by a second synaptic output layer in the IPL. Again, this is unique in the mammalian rod pathway.
AII amacrine cells synapse onto OFF and ON cone bipolar cells
In the mammalian retina, it is well established that the rod ON signal is transmitted via electrical synapses (gap junctions) from AII AC dendrites onto ON cone BCs (Bloomfield and Dacheux, 2001; Deans et al., 2002). In the microbat retina, double immunolabelings for Cx36 and calretinin or recoverin provided evidence for electrical synapses between AII AC dendrites and ON cone BCs. Hence, this crucial element of the rod pathway also exists in the microbat.
AII ACs also feed the ON signal via inhibitory synapses onto OFF cone BCs. Sassoè-Pognetto et al. (1994) showed that the glycine receptor subunit α1 is expressed at glycinergic synapses between AII ACs and OFF cone BCs. We found comparable synaptic contacts in the microbat. Recoverin-ir axon terminals of OFF cone BCs stratify in S1 of the IPL, are well equipped with GlyRα1-ir puncta, and are in close association with calretinin-ir AII dendrites (Fig. 4G,H). The anatomical evidence shown here is that glycinergic transmission between AII ACs and OFF cone BCs is mediated by the GlyRα1 subunit in the rod pathway of the microbat retina too, and it may be assumed that these are the glycinergic synapses through which the rod signals pass from the lobular processes of AII ACs to OFF cone BCs and subsequently to OFF ganglion cells.
GABAergic amacrine cells synapse onto the bistratified rod bipolar cells at two synaptic levels
At the RBC axon terminal, the AII AC constitutes one member of the postsynaptic dyad; the other member is a GABAergic AC known as A17 in cat (Nelson and Kolb, 1985) and as indoleamine-accumulating AC in rabbit (Strettoi et al., 1990). The latter cell type makes reciprocal synapses back onto the RBC axon terminal. Several other amacrine cells provide additional GABAergic input onto RBC axon terminals via nonreciprocal synapses (Sterling and Lampson, 1986). GABAergic input onto RBC terminals is mediated by distinct populations of GABAA and GABAC receptors (Fletcher and Wässle, 1999; Chávez et al., 2010). In microbat, we found similar clusters of GABACRs at the RBC axon terminals both in S2 and S4 plus S5. Furthermore, immunolabeling for GABAARα1 also revealed colocalization with RBC axon terminals (data not shown).
Starburst ACs synthesize and release both GABA and acetylcholine when depolarized (O'Malley and Masland, 1989) and are labeled by antibodies against ChAT in a variety of mammalian species (Voigt, 1986; Famiglietti and Tumosa, 1987; Schmidt et al., 1987; Rodieck and Marshak, 1992). They occur as matching populations of displaced and nondisplaced ACs, and their dendrites form two narrow strata in the ON and OFF sublayer of the IPL. In microbat, two subtypes of ChAT-ir ACs could be detected as well but were ruled out as potential candidates for contacting RBC axon terminals because their stratification levels differed (Fig. 5G).
In rat and rabbit retinae, NOS ACs are a subpopulation of GABAergic ACs (Oh et al., 1998). In rat, mouse, guinea pig, rabbit, and cat, NOS-expressing ACs were labeled by antibodies against a C-terminal fragment of the rat brain NOS (Kim et al., 1999). In microbat, NOS-ir dendrites costratify with RBC axon terminals in S2 and S4 plus S5 (Fig. 5H) and therefore seem to be promising candidates for contacting RBCs. Triple immunolabeling for PKCα, NOS, and either GABAC or CtBP2 provided additional evidence for the close apposition of NOS-ir profiles with ribbon puncta or GABAC-ir puncta on RBC axon terminals (Fig. 6). This makes GABAergic input from NOS-ir ACs onto RBCs very likely. The involvement of NOS-ir ACs in the RBC dyad complex is a novel observation. EM studies in rat and guinea pig did not provide any evidence for NOS-ir ACs in direct contact with RBCs (Chun et al., 1999; Oh et al., 1999). Additional studies are needed to elucidate whether in the microbat retina the NOS-ir ACs form reciprocal and/or nonreciprocal synapses onto RBCs. Therefore, we do not know yet whether the NOS-ir AC represents a further GABAergic AC feeding back onto RBCs in addition to an A17 homolog, or whether it completely replaces an A17 homolog. Nevertheless, the present data indicate that the common mammalian dyad arrangement at RBC axons with GABAergic feedback synapses is also present in microbats.
In summary, our data demonstrate that the rod pathway of the microbat retina largely conforms to the general mammalian blueprint (Bloomfield and Dacheux, 2001) but shows some bat-specific characteristics. One peculiarity is the bistratified organization of the RBC output that also seems to directly affect the morphology of AII AC dendrites. The other characteristic is that in the bat, the ON sublayer occupies a markedly larger proportion of the IPL thickness than in other mammals. This argues for a bat-specific weighting in the processing of light and dark stimuli. Most likely, in the bats' predominantly dark environment, ON signals have greater importance for contrast perception. We assume that this is associated with the importance of visual orientation and navigation tasks during foraging, homing, and predator avoidance (Altringham and Fenton, 2003; Eklöf and Jones, 2003). In this context, it should be noted that microbats are extraordinarily fast and elegant flyers, which makes them unique among mammals and may demand special visual capabilities.
Footnotes
- Received April 30, 2012.
- Revision received October 1, 2012.
- Accepted October 26, 2012.
This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grant MU 2338/1. Animals were kindly provided by Manfred Kössl (Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany) and the late Otto von Helversen (Friedrich-Alexander University, Erlangen, Germany). We thank Driss Benzaid for help with the reconstructions, Sammy Lee for help with confocal images, and Gilles Laurent for help with financial support.
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Brigitte Müller, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Deutschordenstr. 46, 60528 Frankfurt/Main, Germany. brigitte.mueller{at}brain.mpg.de
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