Abstract

BackgroundMice with a function-blocking mutation in the Scn8a gene that encodes Nav1.6, a voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) isoform normally found in several types of retinal neurons, have previously been found to display a profoundly abnormal dark adapted flash electroretinogram. However the retinal function of these mice in light adapted conditions has not been studied.Methodology/Principal FindingsIn the present report we reveal that during light adaptation these animals are shown to have electroretinograms with significant decreases in the amplitude of the a- and b-waves. The percent decrease in the a- and b-waves substantially exceeds the acute effect of VGSC block by tetrodotoxin in control littermates. Intravitreal injection of CoCl2 or CNQX to isolate the a-wave contributions of the photoreceptors in littermates revealed that at high background luminance the cone-isolated component of the a-wave is of the same amplitude as the a-wave of mutants.Conclusions/SignificanceOur results indicate that Scn8a mutant mice have reduced function in both rod and the cone retinal pathways. The extent of the reduction in the cone pathway, as quantified using the ERG b-wave, exceeds the reduction seen in control littermates after application of TTX, suggesting that a defect in cone photoreceptors contributes to the reduction. Unless the postreceptoral component of the a-wave is increased in Scn8a mutant mice, the reduction in the b-wave is larger than can be accounted for by reduced photoreceptor function alone. Our data suggests that the reduction in the light adapted ERG of Scn8a mutant mice is caused by a combination of reduced cone photoreceptor function and reduced depolarization of cone ON bipolar cells. This raises the possibility that Nav1.6 augments signaling in cone bipolar cells.

Highlights

  • Mice with a null mutation in Scn8a, which encodes the voltagegated sodium channel (VGSC) Nav1.6, show a severe physiological defect in dark adapted, or scotopic, vision morphologically the retina appears unchanged [1]

  • There are components of the light adapted electroretinogram (ERG) that are sensitive to tetrodotoxin (TTX), the canonical voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) blocker

  • VGSCs are involved in cone bipolar cell signaling in several animal models including rat, goldfish, salamander, and human [4,5,6,7,8,9] where they seem to be involved in increasing the gain in the cone bipolar cells that depolarize in response to a light flash (ON bipolar cells) under dim conditions [6]

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Summary

Introduction

Mice with a null mutation in Scn8a, which encodes the voltagegated sodium channel (VGSC) Nav1.6, show a severe physiological defect in dark adapted, or scotopic, vision morphologically the retina appears unchanged [1]. VGSCs are involved in cone bipolar cell signaling in several animal models including rat, goldfish, salamander, and human [4,5,6,7,8,9] where they seem to be involved in increasing the gain in the cone bipolar cells that depolarize in response to a light flash (ON bipolar cells) under dim conditions [6] In support of this model TTX in rodents results in reduces the photopic b-wave (an ERG waveform mainly generated in light adapted conditions by the ON cone bipolar cells in mice and rats) amplitude [10,11,12], an effect that is greatest under dark adapted conditions and lessens as the retina light adapts [13]. The retinal function of these mice in light adapted conditions has not been studied

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