Abstract
The receptive field of the Y-ganglion cell comprises two excitatory mechanisms: one integrates linearly over a narrow field, and the other integrates nonlinearly over a wide field. The linear mechanism has been attributed to input from bipolar cells, and the nonlinear mechanism has been attributed to input from a class of amacrine cells whose nonlinear “subunits” extend across the linear receptive field and beyond. However, the central component of the nonlinear mechanism could in theory be driven by bipolar input if that input were rectified. Recording intracellularly from the Y-cell in guinea pig retina, we blocked the peripheral component of the nonlinear mechanism with tetrodotoxin and found the remaining nonlinear receptive field to be precisely co-spatial with the central component of the linear receptive field. Both linear and nonlinear mechanisms were caused by an excitatory postsynaptic potential that reversed near 0 mV. The nonlinear mechanism depended neither on acetylcholine nor on feedback involving GABA or glycine. Thus the central components of the ganglion cell's linear and nonlinear mechanisms are apparently driven by synapses from the same rectifying bipolar cell.
- intracellular recording
- receptive field
- spiking amacrine cell
- nonlinear subunit
- rectification
- guinea pig retina
The receptive field of the Y-ganglion cell comprises two excitatory mechanisms. One integrates inputs linearly across a narrow field (i.e., co-spatial with the ganglion cell's dendritic field), and the other integrates inputs nonlinearly across a wide field (Enroth-Cugell and Robson, 1966;Hochstein and Shapley, 1976a,b; Victor et al., 1977). The response of the linear mechanism can be “nulled”: when a visual stimulus (such as a grating) is adjusted so that bright and dark cover equal areas, reversing the contrast evokes no response. The response of the nonlinear mechanism cannot be nulled: the cell fires at each contrast reversal, i.e., at twice the stimulus cycle. The nonlinear mechanism resolves a much finer grating (higher spatial frequency) than the linear mechanism, suggesting that the nonlinear mechanism is composed of multiple spatial “subunits” (Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b;Derrington et al., 1979).
The linear mechanism has been attributed to bipolar cells (Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b; Victor et al., 1977; Victor and Shapley, 1979), because their excitatory connections to the ganglion cell are co-spatial with its receptive field center (Freed and Sterling, 1988;Cohen and Sterling, 1992). Furthermore, certain bipolar cells in fish (Toyoda, 1974; Sakai and Naka, 1987a) and primate (Dacey et al., 2000) respond linearly (i.e., do not rectify) and thus could provide linear inputs. The wide-field nonlinear mechanism has been attributed to amacrine cells (Fischer et al., 1975; Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b;Victor et al., 1977; Victor and Shapley, 1979; Derrington et al., 1979), because many types respond nonlinearly (i.e., rectify; Sakai and Naka, 1987b; Freed et al., 1996; Stafford and Dacey, 1997), and several types extend processes well beyond the ganglion cell's dendritic field (Tauchi and Masland, 1985; Vaney et al., 1988; Dacey, 1989; MacNeil and Masland, 1998). Consistent with this, most synapses on the cat Y-cell are from amacrine cells (∼76%; Freed and Sterling, 1988; Kolb and Nelson, 1993; Weber and Stanford, 1994). But these attributions have remained uncertain.
For one thing, it has been difficult to grasp how amacrine synapses, which are commonly inhibitory, could generate excitatory nonlinear subunits (Vaney, 1990). For another, recent recordings from bipolar cells in several species—salamander (Burkhardt and Fahey, 1998; Wu et al., 2000), rabbit (Euler and Masland, 2000), and primate (Dacey et al., 2000)—show that certain types express significant rectification. Such bipolar cells might generate the nonlinear mechanism or at least the central component co-spatial with the ganglion cell's dendritic field (Enroth-Cugell and Freeman, 1987). Here we show that the “local” nonlinear mechanism can indeed be separated from the extensive peripheral mechanism, and that when amacrine input is blocked, the central component of the nonlinear mechanism is driven by the same rectifying bipolar synapse that drives the linear mechanism.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Intracellular recording. From a guinea pig anesthetized with ketamine and xylazine (1.0 ml/kg) and nembutal (3.0 ml/kg), an eye was removed, and the intact retina, including choroid, pigment epithelium, and sclera, was mounted flat on a microscope stage. All procedures were performed in accordance with University of Pennsylvania and National Institutes of Health guidelines. The retina was superfused (∼5 ml/min) with oxygenated (95% O2 and 5% CO2) Ames medium (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at 33 ± 1°C. Acridine orange (0.001%; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was added to the superfusate, allowing ganglion cell somata to be identified by fluorescence during brief exposure to near UV light. Large somas (20–25 μm) in the visual streak (dorsal and temporal retina, within 4 mm of the optic disk) were targeted for intracellular recording. Glass electrodes (tip resistance, 80–200 MΩ) included 1% pyranine (Molecular Probes) and 2% neurobiotin (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in 2 mpotassium acetate.
Membrane potential was amplified (IR-283, NeuroData Instruments Corp., Delaware Water Gap, PA), continuously sampled at 2 kHz, and stored on a computer (AxoScope software; Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Data were analyzed with programs written in Matlab (Mathworks, Natick, MA). Spikes were detected off-line. Membrane potential was analyzed in control conditions after removing spikes computationally (Demb et al., 1999). TTX terminated spiking in ∼10 sec, leaving just the graded response. To remove high-frequency noise, responses were low-pass-filtered by convolving with a Gaussian filter (SD, 3 msec or 53 Hz). Membrane potential responses were averaged over 4–20 repeats of a visual stimulus. The resting potential was determined by averaging the potential over 1 sec before and after each stimulus. Response amplitude was measured by averaging the response over 20 msec around the peak and subtracting the resting potential.
Drugs added to the superfusate included tetrodotoxin (Sigma),d-tubocurarine chloride (Sigma), bicuculline methobromide (Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA), (1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine-4yl)-methyphosphinic acid (TPMPA; Sigma), strychnine (Research Biochemicals), and CGP35348 (a gift from Novartis).
After recording, the retina was fixed for 60 min (4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 m phosphate buffer, pH 7.4) and then reacted with streptavidin-Cy3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA), mounted in Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), and visualized by fluorescence microscopy as described (Demb et al., 1999). The cell radius was measured as the distance from the soma to the edge of the dendritic field averaged over eight radial directions. Further details were described previously (Demb et al., 1999).
Visual stimulus. The stimulus was displayed on a 1-inch-diameter computer monitor with green phosphor (Lucivid MR1-103;Microbrightfield, Colchester, VT) projected through the top port of the microscope through a 2.5× objective and focused on the photoreceptor layer. Mean luminance corresponds to ∼105isomerizations · cone−1 · sec−1. Monitor resolution was 852 × 480 pixels with 60 Hz vertical refresh; stimuli were confined to a square with 430 pixels to a side (3.7 mm on the retina). The relationship between gun voltage and monitor intensity was linearized in the software with a look-up table.
Stimuli were spots and square-wave gratings. Except where noted, stimuli were defined in terms of percent Michelson contrast: 100 × (Imax − Imin)/(Imax+ Imin), whereImax andImin are the peak and trough intensities. The contrast of fine gratings was corrected on the basis of a measured optical line spread of 40 μm (full width at half height; Demb et al., 1999). Stimuli were programmed in Matlab using extensions provided by the high-level Psychophysics Toolbox (Brainard, 1997) and the low-level Video Toolbox (Pelli, 1997).
Model fits. Two models were used to analyze the spot and grating responses in Figure 2. For model 1, the fitted response to spots of increasing diameter (see Fig. 2A) was based on a difference-of-Gaussians model (Rodieck, 1965), according to the equation: Equation 1The fitted response to gratings of increasing patch diameter (see Fig. 2B) was based on a single Gaussian model, according to the equation: Equation 2and the fitted response to full-field gratings with increasing mask diameter (see Fig. 2c) was: Equation 3where kc,ks, andksub are the peak amplitudes of the linear center, linear surround, and nonlinear subunits, respectively; ςc,sub and ςs are the SDs of the shared linear center–nonlinear subunits and the linear surround, respectively; and r is the radius of the spot, patch, or mask.
For model 2, the responses to gratings were fit with Equations 2 and 3, except that ςsub was substituted for ςc,sub. Thus, the models differ only in that model 1 forces ς to fit both the linear center and the nonlinear subunits, whereas model 2 fits the subunits independently. For both fits, a numerical search determined the parameters, p, that minimized (Nelder–Mead simplex method; Matlab) the weighted least squares error function: Where Ri is the measured response to the ith stimulus radius, andRi is the fitted response using p = [kc,ks,ksub, ςc,sub, ςs] for model 1 or p = [ksub, ςsub] for model 2. In the denominator, v is response variance. In this way, fitted responses most closely match data points with the lowest variance.
For model 1, the absolute values of the amplitudes (kc andks) were poorly constrained and would assume unreasonably large values. So we applied the constraint thatkc could not exceed 150% of the maximum measured spot response. This barely affected the crucial parameter ς c,sub, which did not change by >6% as this constraint was varied from 110 to 200% of the maximum response or when there was no constraint.
For model 1, average parameters ± SEM were as follows:kc = 15.7 ± 3.2 mV;ks = 7.7 ± 2.0 mV;ksub = 4.6 ± 1.0 mV; ςc,sub = 161 ± 13 μm; ςs = 334 ± 33 μm; andX2 = 56.7 ± 12.9.
For model 2, average parameters were as follows:ksub = 4.6 ± 1.0 mV; ςsub = 166 ± 16 μm; andX2 = 32.4 ± 6.8. Model 2 ςsub was only 5.5 ± 5.5 μm greater than model 1 ςc,sub.
The input–output curve in Figure 5 was described by the following function: where a is peak amplitude, p describes the rise, I50 is the semisaturation point, and b is an offset; I is spot intensity (where for OFF cells, bright = 0 and dark = 1, for ON cells, dark = 0 and bright = 1), and R is the normalized response amplitude. Fitted parameters (Nelder–Mead simplex method; Matlab) were as follows: OFF cells, a = 2.30;p = 3.89; I50= 0.99; and b = −0.18; and ON cells,a = 7.51; p = 1.57;I50 = 2.27; and b = −0.61.
RESULTS
Cell classification
We studied the cellular basis for the nonlinear mechanism by recording intracellularly from ganglion cells in an in vitropreparation of the intact guinea pig retina. Cells were selected as the largest somata (20–25 μm diameter) comprising ∼3–5% of the cell bodies in the ganglion cell layer. Their responses were brisk-transient, peaking 50–100 msec after a step change in contrast. All cells showed a center surround organization and a dominant second harmonic response to a high-spatial frequency grating (Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b). When filled with neurobiotin, cells showed a broad (400–800 μm), monostratified dendritic field and dye coupling to nearby amacrine cells with long axons (Vaney, 1991; Kao et al., 1999). These ganglion cells in guinea pig retina share morphological and physiological properties with Y/α-cells in other mammalian species; therefore, we refer to them as Y-cells (Enroth-Cugell and Robson, 1966;Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b; Caldwell and Daw, 1978; de Monasterio, 1978; Peichl et al., 1987; Tauchi et al., 1992; Stone and Pinto, 1993).
Conceivably, additional features may allow this population of guinea pig Y-cells to be further subdivided. If so, our conclusions regarding the cellular basis of nonlinear summation would apply to both populations. In fact, our conclusions should generalize to multiple types of ganglion cells, including sluggish cells, because nonlinear spatial summation seems to be a common property of most types (Troy et al., 1989, 1995; Rowe and Cox, 1993; Pu et al., 1994; Demb et al., 1999).
The sample included eight ON-center and 24 OFF-center cells with resting potentials of −61.6 ± 1.1 mV (mean ± SEM) and spontaneous firing of 10.0 ± 2.1 spikes/sec. Maximum response amplitudes to center spots of appropriate contrast were as large as 22 mV and averaged 10.8 ± 1.0 mV with 118 ± 13 spikes/sec. The apparent input resistance measured for seven cells (3 ON and 4 OFF) was 31 ± 4.2 MΩ. The cells remained in excellent condition, with large, stable responses for up to 2 hr.
Central component of the nonlinear receptive field is isolated by tetrodotoxin
When stimulated by a fine, contrast-reversing grating, a cell fired spikes at each reversal (i.e., showed frequency doubling), and this occurred whether the grating was centered over the dendritic tree or confined to the far periphery (Fig.1A, top row). However, in the two cases, the membrane potential behaved differently (Fig.1A, middle traces). The central grating hyperpolarized the membrane potential tonically below rest, and each reversal caused a large, transient depolarization. The peripheral grating held the cell near rest, and each reversal caused a transient hyperpolarization followed by a small depolarization (Fig.1A, middle traces). The spike response to the peripheral grating was smaller than that to the central grating and was also slightly delayed (∼20 msec; Fig. 1A).
The delay in the spike response to the peripheral grating is consistent with in vivo recordings (Fischer et al., 1975;Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b; Derrington et al., 1979; Hamasaki and Hanada, 1983). The transient hyperpolarization to the peripheral grating seems consistent with recordings in vivo that show reduced spiking just before the spike burst. This was reported in some transient cells in rabbit retina (Watanabe and Tasaki, 1980), but inhibitory effects were only rarely reported in cat retina (but seeFischer and Kruger, 1974; Passaglia et al., 2001). Either the cat retina lacks an additional inhibitory synapse present in guinea pig and rabbit, or the anesthetics used in cat in vivorecordings affect this component of the response (McIlwain, 1964;Fischer and Kruger, 1974; Hamasaki and Hanada, 1983).
When we added TTX (200 nm) to the bath, the transient depolarizations caused by the central grating were unaltered. However, the tonic hyperpolarization caused by the central grating was reduced, and both the hyperpolarizing and depolarizing responses to the peripheral grating were completely eliminated (Fig. 1A, bottom traces). This suggests that the tonic hyperpolarization and the response to stimulating the periphery depend on a spiking amacrine cell, whereas the response to a central stimulus depends on local nonspiking input (Demb et al., 1999).
Central components of the linear and nonlinear mechanisms are co-spatial
The spatial extent of the TTX-resistant response was measured with various combinations of grating plus a “mask” (a patch or region that remains at mean luminance). A full-field grating with a mask covering the dendritic field evoked a large transient followed by a sustained hyperpolarization (Fig. 1B, left). TTX eliminated the hyperpolarization, revealing a small depolarization. A full-field grating (no mask) evoked a much larger depolarization (Fig.1B, right), suggesting that the excitatory (TTX-resistant) component of the nonlinear mechanism might coincide precisely with the central component of the linear mechanism.
To test this, we added TTX to isolate the central component of the nonlinear mechanism and then determined the space constants of the linear and nonlinear mechanisms. The response of the linear mechanism, probed with a uniform spot, peaked at ∼800 μm diameter and then declined as the spot invaded the antagonistic “surround” (Fig.2A). The response of the nonlinear mechanism, probed with a grating patch, also peaked at ∼800 μm diameter; however, larger gratings did not antagonize the nonlinear response (Fig. 2B). Consistent with this, the response of the nonlinear mechanism was strongest to a full-field grating and decreased with the expansion of a central mask (Fig.2C).
To fit the data, we reasoned first that if the linear and nonlinear mechanisms were driven by the same presynaptic neuron (bipolar cell), they would show the same spatial profile (Enroth-Cugell and Robson, 1966; Linsenmeier et al., 1982; Freed et al., 1992). Therefore, we fit responses of both linear and nonlinear mechanisms with the same central Gaussian, subtracting a broad Gaussian for the linear mechanism's surround (model 1; see Materials and Methods). Fits for this model are shown in Figure 2A–C, solid lines. Alternatively, we reasoned that if the two mechanisms were driven by different neurons, an independent fit to the nonlinear mechanism (model 2) would require different parameters than the joint fit. The crucial parameter is the SD of the central Gaussian (ς) for the linear and nonlinear mechanisms, which describes the space constant of the fit. For model 1, ς was 161 ± 13 μm; for model 2, ς was 166 ± 16 μm (n = 9 OFF and 2 ON). ς was strongly correlated between the models (r = 0.94; p < 0.001; Fig. 2D). Thus the nonlinear mechanism and the central component of the linear mechanism are spatially identical.
We also compared the extent of the central linear and nonlinear mechanisms with the ganglion cell's dendritic field. Taking the center diameter of the mechanism as 4 ς (which includes 95% of its area) (DeVries and Baylor, 1997), the perimeter neatly circumscribed the dendritic field (Fig. 2E). On average, the diameter of the receptive field was 1.17 ± 0.12 times that of the dendritic field (n = 6). This ratio is close to previous measurements (Peichl and Wässle, 1983), further suggesting that the same presynaptic neuron provides excitation for both the nonlinear and linear mechanisms.
Central linear and nonlinear mechanisms modulate an excitatory conductance
If the same synapse mediates the responses to both nonlinear and linear mechanisms, their reversal potentials (Erev) should be the same. We tested this, in the presence of TTX, by presenting a grating or a uniform spot while polarizing the ganglion cell with injected current. The response to grating reversal diminished as the cell depolarized and enlarged as it hyperpolarized. The apparent Erevwas ∼ 0 mV (Fig. 3A). The depolarizing response to the spot behaved similarly, showing the same slope and predicting Erev as ∼0 mV. Results were identical for both OFF (n = 4) and ON (n = 3) cells. This established that the nonlinear and linear mechanisms are both driven by an EPSP, possibly from the same synapse.
Having observed the EPSP evoked by a central grating under TTX, we wondered how a cell would respond to the same stimulus without the drug. ON cells gave essentially the same monophasic response with a lower amplitude (Fig. 3C), but OFF cells gave a triphasic response: fast depolarization followed by hyperpolarization and rebound depolarization (Fig. 3C). The two positive phases apparently belong to the primary EPSP isolated under TTX, whereas the negative phase is caused by an IPSP that interrupts the EPSP. This IPSP (Fig.3C, arrowhead) begins early enough to pull up the apparent reversal potential of the initial peak to near −40 mV (n = 4). Thus under natural conditions, timing of the OFF cell's response to the central grating is sharpened by postsynaptic inhibition from a spiking amacrine cell that is co-spatial with the ganglion cell's dendritic field.
Central nonlinear mechanism responds in the absence of amacrine cell input
The EPSP (TTX-resistant) evoked by a central grating might be caused either by glutamate from a bipolar cell or by acetylcholine from a “starburst” amacrine cell (Masland et al., 1984), common to all mammalian retinas, including guinea pig (Y.-H. Kao, unpublished observations), and known to contact the Y-cell in cat (Vardi et al., 1989). To test this, we blocked nicotinic acetylcholine receptors with 50 μmd-tubocurarine (He and Masland, 1997). This concentration was effective because, in the absence of TTX, it affected other aspects of the light response (data not shown). However, the response to the grating was unaffected across a range of stimulus contrasts (Fig. 4A;n = 4 OFF cells and 2 ON cells); therefore the EPSP evoked by a central grating is probably caused by glutamate.
The glutamate release that ultimately causes this EPSP might itself be caused by an amacrine cell modulation of the bipolar terminal. Modulation on this fast time scale would probably involve GABA or glycine, fast transmitters that are ubiquitous among amacrine neurons. To test this, we applied a mixture of antagonists to all the known receptors: GABAA (bicuculline, 100 μm), GABAB (CGP-35348, 100 μm), GABAC (TPMPA, 50 μm), and glycine receptor (strychnine, 2 μm). This combination of antagonists depolarized the resting potential by nearly 15 mV (from −60.9 ± 2.1 mV down to −46.0 ± 2.5 mV; n = 11). Despite the reduced driving force on cations (∼25%), the response of the nonlinear mechanism persisted and was significantly greater at each of the five highest contrasts (5–80%; p < 0.05; Fig.4B). After washout, the resting potential returned to a more negative level (−59.2 ± 2.7 mV; n = 10). Thus under conditions in which presynaptic inhibition of bipolar terminals is profoundly blocked, the EPSP evoked by a central grating persists.
Instantaneous rectification of bipolar output does not explain the nonlinear mechanism
Under the hypothesis that the bipolar cell voltage response is purely linear (unrectified; Toyoda, 1974; Sakai and Naka, 1987), we asked whether an instantaneous rectification at the bipolar output could generate the response of the nonlinear mechanism (Enroth-Cugell and Freeman, 1987). For example, if the basal rate of transmitter release were low, such a bipolar cell might have a linear voltage response and yet be strongly rectified at the output (because transmitter release cannot go negative). To estimate this output rectification, we recorded the response 40–50 msec after stepping a uniform spot above and below mean luminance (Fig.5). After 50 msec, the depolarizing response saturated presumably because of effects of light adaptation, contrast gain control, or both (Victor, 1987; Walraven et al., 1990).
For OFF cells, the depolarization caused by a full-contrast decrement was approximately fivefold greater than the hyperpolarization caused by a full-contrast increment (Fig. 5). This could be attributable to a rectification at the bipolar cell's release of glutamate, which in OFF cells must be limited in its ability to go negative. Voltage-sensitive channels in the ganglion cell might conceivably contribute to the rectification; however, this contribution would be small, given that voltage-gated Na+ channels were blocked (TTX) and that voltage-sensitive Ca2+channels are not strongly activated in the voltage range of the response (within ∼1–20 mV positive of the approximately −62 mV resting potential).
For ON cells, peak depolarization was less than twofold greater than peak hyperpolarization (i.e., it was nearly linear; Fig. 5). For both OFF and ON cells, rectification was essentially absent at contrasts <20%. Thus, the relationship between bipolar membrane voltage and glutamate release must be essentially linear (unrectified) at low contrast. To explain the response of the nonlinear mechanism, which is proportional to contrast <20% (Fig. 4A,B; Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b), there must be an additional rectifying nonlinearity intrinsic to the bipolar cell that functions at low contrast.
DISCUSSION
We conclude that the linear and nonlinear mechanisms for the central region of the Y-ganglion cell's receptive field can be driven by the same presynaptic circuitry: excitatory input from an array of rectified bipolar cells. OFF bipolar cells provide the excitatory input to the OFF ganglion cell, and ON bipolar cells provide the excitatory input to the ON ganglion cell (Demb et al., 1999). The response of the linear mechanism is generated by homogeneous stimulation of the bipolar array, whereas the response of the nonlinear mechanism is generated by alternate stimulation of subsets of the array (Fig.6). Rectification of the Y-cell's subunit and a similar overall model were proposed earlier in general form on the basis of extracellular responses (Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b; Enroth-Cugell and Freeman, 1987).
Our results are consistent with a bipolar cell, presynaptic to the Y-cell, whose voltage response is rectified at all contrasts (Fig. 6). This would provide rectified glutamate release and a response in the ganglion cell's nonlinear mechanism that is proportional to contrast. At high contrast, the output nonlinearity (Fig. 5) would enhance overall bipolar rectification and would cause the response of the ganglion cell's nonlinear mechanism to accelerate rather than saturate (especially in OFF cells). The saturation actually measured in the response (Fig. 4A,B; Hochstein and Shapley, 1976b) probably arises from contrast gain control, not expressed in the model, which suppresses responses at high contrast (Victor, 1988; Kim and Rieke, 2001). This gain control would need to be stronger in OFF cells to offset the relatively strong effects of their output rectification (Fig. 6), and indeed, gain control is stronger in OFF cells than in ON cells in salamander (Kim and Rieke, 2001).
Consistent with our model, cone bipolar cells with transient, rectified light responses have been identified (Nelson and Kolb, 1983; Burkhardt and Fahey, 1998; Awatramani and Slaughter, 2000; Dacey et al., 2000;Euler and Masland, 2000; Wu et al., 2000). Furthermore, the b1-cell, known to provide the major bipolar input to the cat Y-cell, generates a strong phasic and weak tonic postsynaptic response (Freed and Sterling, 1988; Freed, 2000a). Because most ganglion cell types show strong nonlinear responses, rectified bipolar output may be the norm (Troy et al., 1989, 1995; Rowe and Cox, 1993; Pu et al., 1994; Demb et al., 1999). Properties intrinsic to the bipolar cell must generate this rectification, because it is evident in the absence of amacrine feedback (Fig. 4A,B;Awatramani and Slaughter, 2000; Euler and Masland, 2000). A potential mechanism for OFF bipolar cells would be the ionotropic glutamate receptor on the bipolar cell dendrites, which in certain types enhance transient responses (DeVries, 2000).
What then causes some ganglion cells to be purely linear? It is possibly their input from bipolar types with linear (not rectified) responses. For example, the linear X-cell in cat receives half of its bipolar input from the transient b1-cell, but the rest is from two other types (b2 and b3) that generate a strong tonic postsynaptic response and therefore may rectify only weakly (Cohen and Sterling, 1992; Freed, 2000b). If so, their input to the X-cell would tend to obscure the strongly rectified b1 input. Consistent with this, the primate midget ganglion cell (linear) collects from a bipolar cell with a linear response (Dacey et al., 2000). Alternatively, X-ganglion cells may achieve their linear properties on the basis of inhibitory inputs that are capable of balancing their excitatory inputs to an extent not present in Y-cells.
What function is served by the Y-cell's nonlinear design? Consider an object with mean luminance that resembles the background on a coarse spatial scale (broader than a cell's receptive field center) but exhibits texture (local contrast) on a fine spatial scale (much narrower than a receptive field center). Motion of this object would be invisible to a cell that summed an array of purely linear elements but would be easily detected by a cell that summed an array of rectifying elements (Baker, 1999). Thus, each bipolar cell's rectified response ensures that its vote will be counted, because it cannot be vetoed by signals of equal magnitude but opposite sign in other parts of the receptive field.
Footnotes
This work was supported by National Eye Institute grants F32-EY06850 (J.B.D.), T32-EY07035 (K.Z.), and RO1-EY00828 (P.S.). We thank Drs. Edward Pugh, Michael Freed, Robert Smith, Noga Vardi, and David Calkins for carefully reading and commenting on this manuscript and Sharron Fina for help in preparing this manuscript. We thank Novartis for the generous gift of CGP35348.
Correspondence should be addressed to Jonathan Demb, 123 Anatomy/Chemistry Building, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6058. E-mail:demb{at}retina.anatomy.upenn.edu.