Abstract

1. The effects of glycine on horizontal cells have been examined by microelectrode recording from superfused retinas isolated from the salamander. 2. Low concentrations of glycine (less than 50 microM) hyperpolarized horizontal cells and increased the magnitude of their light responses. Millimolar concentrations produced the opposite effect of depolarizing these cells and reducing their light response amplitudes. 3. In the presence of Co2+ and Mg2+ at concentrations sufficient to suppress the light response, millimolar glycine still exerted a depolarizing effect on horizontal cells, implying that this effect was largely a direct one on horizontal cell membranes. 4. Although both the rod and the cone contributions to horizontal cell light responses were reduced by millimolar glycine, rod input was reduced more, suggesting that millimolar glycine may also exert a presynaptic effect. 5. Strychnine (10 microns) antagonized the effects of millimolar glycine and, in the absence of exogenously applied glycine, caused horizontal cells to hyperpolarize and their light responses to increase in amplitude. This result implies that, in darkness, glycine is tonically released onto horizontal cells and maintains them in a state of partial depolarization. 6. The low-concentration effect of glycine was accompanied by an increased membrane resistance and receptive field size but no change in the balance of rod and cone input. 7. Low concentrations of glycine were often seen to cause a speeding of light responses, whereas high concentrations sometimes caused a slowing of response kinetics. Response kinetics were found to correlate with horizontal cell dark membrane potential so that, positive to -30 mV, depolarization slowed responses whereas kinetics at more negative values were largely independent of voltage.

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