Abstract

BackgroundVisual stimuli elicit action potentials in tens of different retinal ganglion cells. Each ganglion cell type responds with a different latency to a given stimulus, thus transforming the high-dimensional input into a temporal neural code. The timing of the first spikes between different retinal projection neurons cells may further change along axonal transmission. The purpose of this study is to investigate if intraretinal conduction velocity leads to a synchronization or dispersion of the population signal leaving the eye.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe ‘imaged’ the initiation and transmission of light-evoked action potentials along individual axons in the rabbit retina at micron-scale resolution using a high-density multi-transistor array. We measured unimodal conduction velocity distributions (1.3±0.3 m/sec, mean ± SD) for axonal populations at all retinal eccentricities with the exception of the central part that contains myelinated axons. The velocity variance within each piece of retina is caused by ganglion cell types that show narrower and slightly different average velocity tuning. Ganglion cells of the same type respond with similar latency to spatially homogenous stimuli and conduct with similar velocity. For ganglion cells of different type intraretinal conduction velocity and response latency to flashed stimuli are negatively correlated, indicating that differences in first spike timing increase (up to 10 msec). Similarly, the analysis of pair-wise correlated activity in response to white-noise stimuli reveals that conduction velocity and response latency are negatively correlated.Conclusion/SignificanceIntraretinal conduction does not change the relative spike timing between ganglion cells of the same type but increases spike timing differences among ganglion cells of different type. The fastest retinal ganglion cells therefore act as indicators of new stimuli for postsynaptic neurons. The intraretinal dispersion of the population activity will not be compensated by variability in extraretinal conduction times, estimated from data in the literature.

Highlights

  • Visual information is transmitted from the eye to the brain in trains of action potentials originating from populations of projection neurons, the retinal ganglion cells

  • A single visual stimulus excites more than a dozen different types of ganglion cells each of them tiling the retinal surface in a mosaic-like fashion [1,2,3,4]

  • Electrical images of action potentials propagating through retinal axons In this study we recorded the extracellular voltages of retinal ganglion cells stimulated with different light stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

Visual information is transmitted from the eye to the brain in trains of action potentials originating from populations of projection neurons, the retinal ganglion cells. Timelagged correlations between retinal ganglion cells facilitate rapid stimulus encoding [13,14] that may be used by animals in stimulus discrimination tasks [7]. These studies exemplify the impact of spike timing in a neuronal population. Latencies or relative time differences in the abovementioned studies were measured at the sites of signal initiation, i.e. close to the cell somata. The purpose of this study is to investigate if intraretinal conduction velocity leads to a synchronization or dispersion of the population signal leaving the eye

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