Abstract
Off-axis illumination elicits lateral inhibition at the primary visual synapse in crustacea and insects. The evidence suggests that the inhibitory action is presynaptic (i.e., on the photoreceptor terminal) and that the amacrine neurons of the lamina ganglionaris (the first synaptic layer) may be part of the inhibitory pathway. The neurotransmitters and the synaptic mechanisms are unknown. We show by immunocytochemistry that GABA and a tachykinin-related peptide (TRP) are localized in the amacrine neurons of the crayfish lamina ganglionaris. Indirect evidence suggests that GABA and TRP may be colocalized in these neurons. The extensive processes of the amacrine neurons occupy lamina layers containing the terminals of photoreceptors. Application of exogenous GABA and TRP to photoreceptor terminals produces a short-latency, dose-dependent hyperpolarization with a decay time constant on the order of a few seconds. TRP also exhibits actions that evolve over several minutes. These include a reduction of the receptor potential (and the light-elicited current) by ∼40% and potentiation of the action of GABA by ∼100%. The mechanisms of TRP action in crayfish are not known, but a plausible pathway is a TRP-dependent elevation of intracellular Ca2+ that reduces photoreceptor sensitivity in arthropods. Although the mechanisms are not established, the results indicate that in crayfish photoreceptors TRP displays actions on two time scales and can exert profound modulatory control over cell function.
- tachykinin
- photoreceptor
- lateral inhibition
- GABA
- visual transduction
- presynaptic inhibition
- crayfish
- invertebrate
Lateral inhibition is a prominent feature of the peripheral visual circuits of both vertebrates and arthropods in which it functions in both contrast enhancement and gain control. In vertebrate retina, lateral inhibition is mediated by horizontal cells that feedback a sign-inverted signal to receptor terminals (Attwell et al., 1983). In arthropods the mechanisms of lateral inhibition are still unresolved, but the inhibitory action seems to be on the presynaptic side of the primary synapse (photoreceptor to monopolar cell) (Wang-Bennett and Glantz, 1987;Laughlin and Osorio, 1989). In crayfish monopolar cells subjected to inhibitory visual stimuli, the light response and the input conductance decline in parallel. Furthermore, there is suggestive evidence that the amacrine neurons of the first synaptic region, the lamina, may be part of the inhibitory feedback pathway (Hamori and Horridge, 1966;Strausfeld and Campos-Ortega, 1977; Glantz and Bartels, 1994).
To identify the neurotransmitters that mediate lateral inhibition, we examined the cellular localization of GABA and a tachykinin-related peptide (TRP) and tested their actions on photoreceptor terminals. GABA is an obvious transmitter candidate because of its ubiquitous role in presynaptic inhibition in the crayfish nervous system (Takeuchi and Takeuchi, 1966; Kennedy et al., 1980; Glantz et al., 1985; Cattaert et al., 1994). TRP is considered because a substance P-like peptide is present in amacrine neurons of lobster lamina (Mancillas et al., 1981). Furthermore, substance P functions in visual processing in vertebrate retina (see Karten and Brecha, 1980; Zalutsky and Miller, 1990; Casini et al., 1997; Cuenca and Kolb, 1998) where it is localized to specific types of amacrine and ganglion cells.
Peptides with resemblance to tachykinins, TRPs, have been isolated from insects (see Schoofs et al., 1993; Nässel, 1999) and more recently from two crustaceans, the crab Cancer borealis and the shrimp Penaeus vannmei (Christie et al., 1997; Nieto et al., 1998). The presence of endogenous TRPs in the brain of the crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus used in the present study has been indicated previously by immunocytochemistry and analysis of tissue extract by HPLC combined with radioimmunoassay using an antiserum to a locust TRP (Johansson et al., 1999). Because we now know that the TRP antiserum and monoclonal antibodies to substance P label the same neurons in crustaceans (Blitz et al., 1995; Johansson et al., 1999), it is suggestive that the substance P-like immunoreactivity described previously in lobster amacrine neurons (Mancillas et al., 1981; Fingerman et al., 1985) represents native TRP.
In this report we show GABA, TRP, and substance P immunoreactivity in amacrine cells of the lamina ganglionaris of the crayfish P. leniusculus. The amacrine cell neurites arborize in lamina regions containing photoreceptor terminals, as might be expected of a component of the lateral inhibitory pathway. Furthermore, exogenous GABA and TRP have functional actions consistent with their possible roles in presynaptic inhibition of the primary visual synapse. Both agents produce rapid and dose-dependent hyperpolarizations of photoreceptor terminals. Additionally, TRP slowly (over several minutes) diminishes the photoreceptor's light-activated current and increases the magnitude of the GABA-elicited response.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals. The crayfish P. leniusculus were purchased from suppliers in California and Stockholm.
Immunocytochemistry. The production of rabbit antiserum to the locust tachykinin-related peptide locustatachykinin-I (LomTK-I) has been described previously (Nässel, 1993). The antiserum specificity was characterized on insect and crustacean tissue previously (Nässel, 1993; Lundquist et al., 1994; Blitz et al., 1995; Christie et al., 1997; Johansson et al., 1999). A rat monoclonal antibody to the vertebrate tachykinin substance P (see Cuello et al., 1979) was purchased from Accurate Chemicals (Westbury, NY). The immunoreactive properties of this antibody on crustacean tissue have been characterized by Goldberg et al. (1988), Sandeman et al. (1990), and Blitz et al. (1995). The well characterized rabbit antiserum to GABA (see Füller et al., 1989) was kindly provided by Dr. M. Eckert (University of Jena, Jena, Germany).
For peptide immunocytochemistry (ICC) optic lobes were rapidly dissected in saline and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1m sodium phosphate buffer. For GABA ICC the dissected lobes were fixed in a mixture of 5 ml of glutaraldehyde (25%), 15 ml of saturated aqueous picric acid, and 0.1 ml of glacial acetic acid (Schot et al., 1981). In both cases fixation was for a minimum of 4 hr at 4°C. After fixation, tissues were thoroughly washed in buffer, infiltrated with 20% sucrose for 24 hr, rapidly frozen on a cryostat stage, and then cut into 25-μm-thick sections on a Leitz cryostat 1720 (Leitz, Wetzlar, Germany) and mounted onto chrome-alum-coated microscope slides. Tissue sections to be used for peptide ICC were taken directly to antiserum incubation, whereas for GABA ICC the best pretreatment was as follows (see Nässel and Eckström, 1997): the sections were incubated with 0.13m sodium borohydride in 0.05 m Tris HCl (15 min) and then washed in buffer, or they were dehydrated in a graded ethanol series (50–99.5%) and xylene and then rehydrated.
The antisera were applied on the sections for 48 hr at 4°C in 0.01m PBS, 0.5% bovine serum albumin, and 0.25% Triton X-100 at the following dilutions: anti-LomTK-I at 1:1000, anti-substance P at 1:250, and anti-GABA at 1:2000. The primary antisera were detected by peroxidase-conjugated swine anti-rabbit (LomTK) (from Dako, Copenhagen, Denmark), by goat anti-rat (substance P) IgGs (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), or by the ABC method (GABA) with peroxidase-tagged streptavidin using a Vectastain kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). As controls, both anti-LomTK (1:1000) and anti-substance P (1:500) were preabsorbed with LomTK-I peptide (2 × 10−5m) and applied to tissue sections as described above.
The sections were analyzed on either a Zeiss Axioplan II or a ZeissAxiophot microscope equipped with interference contrast optics and epifluorescence. Images were either obtained as photographic slides (Kodak Ektachrome 100 or 400) or captured by an integrated chilled color CCD camera (Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu City, Japan). In both cases the images were edited in Adobe Photoshop 4.0 (photographic slides were digitized by means of a flatbed scanner, Umax PowerLook II; Umax Data Systems, Fremont, CA).
The physiological preparation. Crayfish of 7–10 cm in length and of both sexes were prepared as described by Glantz and Bartels (1994). The rostrum was removed, and the eyestalks were glued to the cephalic carapace with cyanoacrylate adhesive (Superglue). The lamina and receptor layer were exposed by excision of the dorsal cuticle of the eyestalk and the dorsal cornea. The animals were exsanguinated by perfusion with oxygenated crayfish saline at 10°C to prevent the formation of blood clots around the dissected area of tissue. Recordings were made with the eyecup in situ or with an isolated eyecup and brain preparation. The recording chamber consisted of a Plexiglas dish in which one wall contained a frosted glass plate to image the visual stimulus. The eye was ∼1.0 cm from the glass plate. After the dissection, the saline solution over the lamina was lowered to ∼0.5 mm above the tissue.
The visual stimulus. Visual stimuli were delivered by a 7.0 mW He–Ne laser beam directed to the eye by galvanometer-controlled mirrors. Intensity was controlled by a 6.0 log unit neutral density wedge, and stimulus presentation was controlled by an electromagnetic shutter and pulse generator. The maximum intensity at the eye was 3.0 mW/mm2. To minimize adaptation, stimuli were presented no more frequently than 1 stimulus/5 sec. For prolonged repeated stimulus sequences, intensity was set to <1.0% of the saturating intensity, stimulus duration was set to 0.2–0.5 sec, and the interstimulus interval was 8–10 sec.
Perfusion and ligand injection. As a TRP ligand, the cockroach peptide LemTRP-4, which differs from CabTRP-Ia by only one amino acid residue (a Met6 to Leu6 change) in a region likely to be unimportant for receptor binding and activation (Nässel, 1999), was used. During ligand injection the lamina and photoreceptors were perfused with crayfish saline at a rate of 0.1 ml/sec. GABA at 0.1 or 1.0 mm and TRP at 1 or 10 μm were delivered to photoreceptor terminals in the lamina with pressure injection via separate capillaries with 10–15 μm tips. Injection volumes of 0.01–1.0 μl were controlled by pulse pressure and duration. To minimize desensitization, GABA volumes were adjusted to elicit nonsaturating responses, and injection frequency was set to 1 injection/30 sec. TRP was either injected in nanoliter volumes or perfused over the lamina via continuous injection at 2–5 μl/min.
Recording procedures and data analysis. Recording electrodes were filled with 3 mK+-acetate and selected for resistance (∼100 MΩ) and speed (time constant <0.1 msec after capacity compensation). Photoreceptors were typically impaled in the distal retina in the relatively large soma–rhabdomere region. A few recordings were made in the axons close to the terminals.
Receptor signals were led to an Axoclamp-2B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) that was switched between bridge mode, discontinuous current clamp, and discontinuous voltage clamp. In discontinuous modes, current injection and voltage measurements alternated during a 2.0 msec duty cycle (500 Hz sampling rate). Because the membrane time constant varies between 50 msec (in the dark) and 20 msec (light adapted), the switching period is sufficiently fast to resolve all photoreceptor signals. The amplifier bandwidth was direct current to 30 kHz. Input resistance measurements were performed in discontinuous current clamp with currents of −0.1 to −0.3 nA, and the light-elicited responses were measured in either bridge mode or discontinuous voltage-clamp mode.
Responses were digitized at 500 Hz via an analog-to-digital board and a 486 personal computer. To assess the reliability of the responses, visual stimuli and ligand applications were typically repeated five times, and the responses to each condition were averaged. Except where noted, data used in measurements and shown in the figures represent the averages of five or more responses that were low-pass filtered at 100 Hz after averaging. The SD of the averaged data rarely exceeded ±10% of the mean response for visual stimuli and current pulses and was typically approximately ±20% of the mean for TRP- and GABA-elicited responses.
RESULTS
Immunocytochemistry
The antiserum to the locust TRP, LomTK-I, and the monoclonal antibody to substance P are known to cross-react with the same neurons in insect and crustacean brains, probably by cross-reacting with the cognate TRP (see Blitz et al., 1995; Johansson et al., 1999;Nässel, 1999). In crayfish brain both anti-LomTK and anti-substance P can be blocked by locust TRP (Johansson et al., 1999). We found that this is also the case in the optic lobes of the crayfishP. leniusculus. We thus refer to the substance P- and LomTK-immunoreactive neurons as TRP immunoreactive (TRP-IR). In the lamina the two antisera labeled numerous amacrine cells, the majority of which had cell bodies below the lamina synaptic layer (Fig.1A). In each specimen, however, there were a small number of amacrines with displaced cell bodies. These are located distal to the lamina synaptic layer in the outer layer of monopolar cell bodies (see Fig. 1B). The amacrines form TRP-IR varicose processes that invade the lamina synaptic layer. At the distal and proximal borders of the neuropil the amacrine neurons form tangential processes with numerous varicosities along their length (Fig. 1B,C). Although the number of TRP-IR amacrines is far below that of synaptic units, cartridges of the lamina, their processes cover the entire projected retinal mosaic in the lamina. The amacrine processes are clearly within the domains of the photoreceptor terminals in the lamina.
In addition to the amacrines we also found TRP-IR neurons that interconnect the lamina and the medulla externa (Fig.1A,D). These neurons that have their cell bodies in the medulla cell body layer (in the outer optic chiasm; Fig.1A) are present in a number substantially smaller than that of the cartridges and/or ommatidia. The arborizations within the lamina superimpose those of the amacrines (as shown in Fig.1D), but because the immunolabeling is weaker in the lamina–medulla neurons a distinction can be made between the two types of neurons.
GABA immunoreactivity (GABA-IR) was seen in amacrines of the lamina and in neurons connecting the lamina and medulla externa (Fig.2A,B,D). The amacrines have the same morphology as the TRP-IR ones (as shown in Fig.2B,C). The lamina–medulla-connecting neurons, however, are distinct from the TRP-IR-interconnecting neurons (they form processes in a midlayer of the lamina, not seen after TRP immunocytochemistry; Fig. 2, compare B–D). In addition, the GABA-IR neurons have cells bodies clustered anterior to the medulla (Fig. 2E). The GABA immunocytochemistry required specific fixation and pretreatment that precluded the possibility of double labeling with antiserum to substance P or LomTK. Thus we can only infer by indirect criteria that GABA- and TRP-immunoreactive material is colocalized in the amacrines. First, the number of amacrines displayed by each of the two antisera is approximately the same, and the morphology of the amacrines displayed by each of the two antisera is very similar (Fig. 2B,C). Second, the amacrines have large nuclei, and counterstaining of the anti-GABA-labeled sections reveal that there are very few large nuclei below the lamina that are not in cell bodies that display GABA-IR (Fig.2A,B).
GABA hyperpolarizes photoreceptor terminals
Previous studies (Wang-Bennett and Glantz, 1987; Glantz and Bartels, 1994) have shown that lateral inhibition in lamina monopolar cells is maximized by off-axis or broad-field illumination and appears to be expressed presynaptically. When photoreceptor responses are recorded in the soma there is no obvious sign of inhibition in the response to broad-field illumination (as shown in Fig.3A). Recordings from photoreceptor axons, however, often reveal a hyperpolarizing afterpotential (implying inhibition) in the wake of the excitatory light response as shown in Figure 3B. At log10 intensity −3, the afterpotential is approximately −1.0 mV. It increases to −3.0 mV at intermediate intensities and is replaced with a depolarizing afterpotential at log intensity 0.
Because a GABA-activated Cl− conductance appears to mediate presynaptic inhibition at crayfish neuromuscular junction (Takeuchi and Takeuchi, 1966) and in primary afferent terminals (Kennedy et al., 1980; Cattaert et al., 1994), it is possible that GABA is responsible for the light-elicited hyperpolarization of receptor terminals. The application of GABA to the lamina (where photoreceptor terminals are located) elicits a dose-dependent hyperpolarization of the photoreceptor terminal (as shown in Fig.4A). In axonal recordings the largest responses are −5 to −10 mV in amplitude. In soma recordings however the largest responses are approximately −2 mV. The GABA-elicited response is relatively resistant to desensitization. An unusual feature of some arthropod chloride channels is that they are activated by acetylcholine (ACh) in addition to GABA (Zufall et al., 1988). In photoreceptor terminals, ACh elicited dose-dependent hyperpolarizing responses as shown in Figure 4B. The sensitivity was similar to that of GABA with half-maximal responses at ∼10 μm and saturation at 100 μm.
The GABA-elicited response is associated with an increase in membrane conductance that reduces the amplitude of both current-elicited (as shown in Fig. 5) and light-elicited (as shown in Fig. 6) membrane polarizations. A typical result from an axonal recording is shown in Figure5B, in which the initial phase of the GABA-elicited response (shown in Fig. 5A) is associated with a reduction in the current-elicited polarization. This reduction indicates an increase in the receptor's input conductance from 38 to 54 nS. In most of our recordings the GABA-dependent reduction in the light response was modest (10–20%) and consistent with a small reduction in input resistance. The attenuation shown in Figure 6 is ∼30%.
TRP hyperpolarizes the receptor terminal
Nanoliter volumes of 1.0 or 10 μm TRP (LemTRP-4) elicited dose-dependent hyperpolarizations of 1–3 mV in receptor terminals as shown in Figure 7. Note that the numbers above each trace in Figure7 represent the gram-equivalent dose. The TRP concentration in the injection pipette was fixed (10 μm), whereas the injected volume was varied with pressure. The actual concentrations are unknown, but they are <10 μm and presumably proportional to the injected dose. The responses typically peak at 0.5–1.0 sec after the injection and decay to baseline after another 3–5 sec. Although TRP occasionally produced responses of up to −5 mV, a range of 0.5–3.0 mV was more common. TRP also produced modest reductions in receptor membrane input resistance as shown in Figure 8. Typical changes were 10–20%, indicative of conductance increases of 5–10 nS.
A voltage-clamp analysis was undertaken in 14 cells to examine the action of TRP on voltage-dependent conductances. The receptor exhibits a leakage conductance and a delayed rectifier potassium conductance similar to those found in other arthropod receptors (Pepose and Lisman, 1978). The outward currents were insensitive to TRP (data not shown), but the leakage conductance exhibited modest increases with TRP perfusion consistent with the results in Figure 8.
TRP also exhibits two additional actions consistent with a role in lateral inhibition or light adaptation: (1) a reduction in the photoreceptor's response to a flash of light that develops over several minutes and (2) potentiation of the action of GABA that also evolves on a time scale of minutes.
TRP reduces the receptor potential
If a light flash is presented during or immediately after a single TRP pulse, the receptor potential is unaffected. Significant modulation was observed however over a longer time scale and with continuous perfusion.
Figure 9 shows light responses elicited by flashes of constant intensity in control conditions (Fig.9A, 0 min perfusion), during a 5 min perfusion of the lamina with 1.0 μm TRP (Fig. 9A), and after a wash with saline (Fig. 9B). In this cell the TRP reduced the light response by 40% in 5 min. Similar results were obtained in 19 of 20 cells tested, and these cells exhibited a 37.9 ± 4.3% (± SE) response attenuation in 3–5 min that was associated with a 70% reduction in visual sensitivity. Similar results were obtained with 1 and 10 μm TRP.
Because TRP reduces the receptor potential to a much greater degree than the input resistance, it is possible that TRP has actions in the visual transduction pathway or on a voltage-gated inward current associated with the receptor potential. Figure10, A and B, compares receptor potentials elicited at four flash intensities in control and during TRP perfusion. TRP reduced the receptor potential by ∼50% except at the highest intensity at which the reduction is 12%. Figure 10, C and D, shows the light-activated currents (measured at −60 mV, the membrane resting potential) at the same intensities and under the same conditions. TRP reduced the currents at all intensities by ∼55%. The attenuations of the voltage and current responses will not be precisely proportional because of different effects of the input conductance, reversal potential, and voltage-dependent outward current on the two measurements. Furthermore, the measurements in Figure 10 do not distinguish between TRP actions on the photochemical cascade and actions on the light-activated ion channels. In four comparable experiments the results indicated that most or all of the TRP-dependent reduction in receptor potential could be caused by a corresponding reduction in the light-activated current.
Because the TRP actions on photocurrent were observed with the photoreceptors clamped at the membrane resting potential (as shown in Fig. 10), voltage-gated currents do not contribute to the TRP-dependent attenuations of the light-elicited current. It is possible however that TRP might modulate a voltage-gated inward current that contributes to the receptor potential. Although we have found no convincing evidence of a voltage-dependent inward current (even with outward currents partially blocked with tetraethylammonium), we are not prepared to say that they are absent and that they could not contribute to the TRP action on the receptor potential.
TRP potentiates the response to GABA
TRP perfusion produces a reversible increase in the response to GABA, as shown in Figure 11. In soma recordings the response to GABA increased in six of seven cells tested from −0.52 ± 0.13 mV (± SE) to −1.26 ± 0.22 mV (± SE). The enhancement evolved over 2–5 min. The TRP effect was sufficiently robust that the TRP-dependent potentiation could be repeated in the same cell after a wash to restore normal GABA responsiveness (Fig. 11,third, fourth traces). A 50% recovery typically required ∼5 min. The GABA-elicited responses were not altered by single TRP injections whether the two were simultaneous or with GABA delayed by up to 10 sec.
DISCUSSION
Our principal findings are that the amacrine neurons of the crayfish lamina ganglionaris contain TRP and GABA. The neurites of the amacrine neurons arborize in the lamina layers that contain photoreceptor terminals. Both GABA and TRP produce actions consistent with presynaptic inhibition of the primary visual synapse. These actions include relatively fast, dose-dependent hyperpolarizations of the photoreceptor terminal associated with small increases in membrane conductance. Furthermore, TRP produces a slow reduction of the light-elicited photoreceptor current and reversibly potentiates the action of GABA. This is the first evidence of peptidergic modulation of sensory cells in arthropods. The results support inhibitory actions of TRP in contrast with the commonly reported excitatory action of vertebrate tachykinins (see Otsuka and Yoshioka, 1993).
Colocalization of TRP and GABA
The present results indicate that amacrines of the crayfish lamina ganglionaris [first described by Strausfeld and Nässel (1981)] contain TRP and probably colocalized GABA. It was shown previously that antisera to FMRFamide and to the octadecapeptide pigment-dispersing hormone were colocalized in neurons likely to be amacrines of the crayfish lamina ganglionaris (Mangerich et al., 1988). Thus it is possible that the same amacrines colocalize members of three peptide families and GABA. Because the immunocytochemistry protocols for neuropeptides and neuroactive amino acids are not compatible, we did not obtain clear double-label evidence of the TRP and GABA colocalization. Only indirect evidence suggests this colocalization; the numbers of TRP- and GABA-immunoreactive amacrines are approximately the same, and the morphology and distributions of the neurons are very similar. It is also known that GABA and TRPs are colocalized in neurons of the insect brain (see Nässel, 1999) and that in the vertebrate retina GABA and substance P have been found to be colocalized in amacrine and ganglion cells (Pourcho and Goebel, 1988; Caruso et al., 1990; Cuenca and Kolb, 1998). Because two additional types of lamina neurons (connecting to the medulla externa) contain TRP and GABA, respectively, it is possible that the observed actions of TRPs and GABA may not depend on the amacrines.
Inhibitory actions of GABA and TRP
The interpretation of the physiological data is based on a working hypothesis that lamina amacrine neurons are excited (directly or indirectly) by photoreceptor cells and that the amacrine neurons provide inhibitory feedback to the photoreceptor terminals (Glantz and Bartels, 1994). The hyperpolarization of receptor terminals by broad-field illumination and by GABA and TRP is consistent with this hypothesis. Furthermore, GABA is associated with presynaptic inhibition and increased Cl− conductance at both peripheral and central crustacean synapses (Kennedy et al., 1980;Glantz et al., 1985; Finger and Martin, 1989; Cattaert et al., 1994). Because the actions of ACh are similar to those of GABA, it is possible that the photoreceptor's GABA receptor is similar to the nonjunctional receptors of crustacean muscle (Zufall et al., 1988). In the lamina of flies (Hardie, 1987), GABA depolarizes the lamina monopolar cells (LMCs) and diminishes the cell's input conductance. These actions mimic the effects of off-axis illumination in both flies (Dubs, 1982;Laughlin and Osorio, 1989) and crayfish (Wang-Bennett and Glantz, 1987). In preliminary studies of crayfish LMCs, GABA reduced the LMC light response. The size of the GABA-elicited response in photoreceptor terminals implies a capacity for strong inhibition. In crayfish (Glantz, 1991) and other arthropods, contrast stimuli elicit receptor potentials of a few millivolts, comparable with the magnitude of the GABA-elicited response.
The physiological actions of TRP are also consistent with both short-term and long-term roles in presynaptic inhibition. The TRP-elicited hyperpolarization and modest increase in terminal input conductance are similar to the actions of GABA and should reduce transmitter release by the photoreceptor. Previous studies have shown that substance P can increase the leakage conductance in sympathetic neurons (Jones and Adams, 1987) and increase a Cl− conductance (Janssen and Sims, 1994) in smooth muscle cells. Either finding could be the basis of the observations reported here.
The reduction of receptor potential by TRP is opposite to the effects of substance P on the Limulus photoresponse (Mancillas and Selverston, 1984). Any one of a number of differences between the studies might account for the different results. These include species differences or differences in the ligands (substance P vs LemTRP-4), the site of application (retinula perfusion in Limulus vs lamina injection in crayfish), or the effective concentration ranges (1.0–100 nm in Limulus vs 1–10 μm in crayfish). Another important distinction is that substance P actions in Limulus appear to reflect principally the migration of shielding pigments and changes in rhabdome structure that in turn alter the quantum catch. A comparable system in crayfish (Arechiga et al., 1990) responds to serotonin to increase visual sensitivity. The response has a latency of 20 min and a time to peak of 40 min. This should be compared with the 3–5 min time course of sensitivity changes after TRP injection.
Thus we interpret the reduction of the receptor potential by TRP as principally attributable to an attenuation of the light-elicited current and TRP action on visual transduction. This influence could be mediated by a TRP-dependent rise in intracellular Ca2+ (Li et al., 1991; Nakanishi, 1991). Intracellular Ca2+ is known to reduce arthropod light sensitivity during light adaptation (Lisman and Brown, 1972), and it is possible that TRP shares a common pathway. In mammals, tachykinin receptors are coupled to G-proteins and in many cases activate the phospholipase C pathway. This pathway involves inositol phospholipid hydrolysis and production of inositol triphosphate and diacylglycerol that in turn induce a rise in intracellular Ca2+ and the activation of protein kinase C, respectively (Guard and Watson, 1991; Otsuka and Yoshioka, 1993). When cloned TRP receptors from Drosophila were heterologously expressed, ligand exposure activated the phospholipase C pathway and a Ca2+-dependent Cl− conductance (Li et al., 1991; Monnier et al., 1992).
The enhancement of the photoreceptor's GABA-elicited response by TRP suggests a novel action of TRP on GABA receptors, but other possibilities based on indirect TRP actions (Kouznetsova and Nistri, 1998; Maubach et al., 1998) have not been eliminated. There are a few reports that suggest TRP modulation of ligand-gated conductances (Otsuka and Yoshioka, 1993; Yamada and Akasu, 1996; Parker and Grillner, 1998). For example, in avian sympathetic ganglia and bovine chromaffin cells, substance P increases the rate of desensitization of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. This action is probably mediated by the phospholipase C pathway and the activation of protein kinase C (Clapham and Neher, 1984; Simmons et al., 1990).
Morphological evidence suggests that TRP and GABA might have synergistic actions in some systems. TRP and GABA are colocalized in locust brain neurons (Vitzthum and Homberg, 1998), in cat spinal dorsal horn neurons (Ma and Ribeiro-da-Silva, 1995), in motor neurons of guinea pig small intestine (Williamson et al., 1996), in primate and rat retinal amacrine cells (Caruso et al., 1990; Casini et al., 1997;Cuenca and Kolb, 1998), and in primate frontal cortex (Jakab et al., 1997). Our evidence supporting synergistic GABA–TRP inhibitory actions is generally consistent with observations of inhibitory influences of substance P in mammalian brain (Kow and Pfaff, 1988; Margeta-Mitrovic et al., 1997), in peripheral ganglia (Jones and Adams, 1987; Gilbert et al., 1998), in smooth muscle (Sun et al., 1993; Janssen and Sims, 1994), and in lobster olfactory neurons (Schmidt and Ache, 1994). In this context it is notable that in addition to TRP, crayfish amacrine neurons contain a FMRFamide-like peptide (Mangerich et al., 1988). In the mollusc Aplysia FMRFamide has potent presynaptic inhibitory effects (Belardetti et al., 1987; Sweatt et al., 1989;Dreijer et al., 1995; Klein, 1995) based on an enhancement of a K+ current and a reduction of a Ca2+ current. On the contrary side, much evidence attests to excitatory effects of TRPs in both vertebrates (Maggio, 1988; Nakanishi, 1991) and arthropods (Blitz et al., 1995;Christie et al., 1997; Lundquist and Nässel, 1997), and there is also evidence that substance P antagonizes GABA action (Yamada and Akasu, 1996).
The results prompt the question of why two or perhaps three agents (including FMRFamide) contribute to inhibition of photoreceptor terminals. Although GABA and TRP have some similar actions, the stronger effects of TRP are distinct from the actions of GABA and are expressed over a longer time scale. As noted previously, lateral inhibition is the basis of contrast enhancement and contributes to neural gain control during visual adaptation. Contrast enhancement functions operate over short (millisecond to second) time scales similar to the time course of GABA and the fast TRP actions. Some aspects of light adaptation evolve slowly, and the time course is more compatible with the slower TRP actions. A related possibility is that the different substances may be released by amacrine cells under quantitatively different levels of excitation (Marder et al., 1995). Thus GABA release might be modulated by normal contrast stimuli, and TRP may be released by more substantial (e.g., order of magnitude) increases in mean intensity. There is extensive evidence that neuromodulatory substances may increase photoreceptor sensitivity in the context of dark adaptation and/or circadian rhythms. In crayfish (Arechiga et al., 1990), flies (Hevers and Hardie, 1995), and locust (Cuttle et al., 1995), serotonin increases the receptor potential by modulating a K+ conductance (in insects). In Limulus lateral eye, substance P and octopamine increase retinal sensitivity. Substance P produces alterations in the dioptric apparatus (Mancillas and Selverston, 1984). Octopamine also influences ommatidial structure (Kass and Barlow, 1984) and appears to modulate voltage-gated currents activated during the light response (Kass et al., 1988; Renninger et al., 1989). The modulation is expressed with a circadian rhythm.
We do not know whether lamina amacrine neurons synapse on photoreceptor terminals or whether GABA or TRP release is light dependent. The presence of GABA and TRP in amacrine neurons and the actions of these ligands on photoreceptor terminals in the lamina are consistent with their roles in lateral or feedback inhibition of the primary visual synapse. The pronounced and prolonged effects of TRP on both the visual response and the actions of GABA indicate that the transduction pathway that subserves TRP action has broad modulatory control over photoreceptor function.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Grant IBN-9807548 and by the National Library of Medicine Fellowship 1T15LM07093. D.R.N. was supported by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council (NFR). The technical assistance of Anne Karlsson is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Dr. M. Eckert (University of Jena) for the supply of GABA antiserum. We also thank the Rice University Keck Center for Computational Biology for their support and the staff of Friday Harbor Laboratories, University of Washington, for their hospitality and material assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. R. M. Glantz, Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Rice University, P.O. Box 1892, Houston, TX 77251. E-mail: rmg{at}bioc.rice.edu.