Abstract
During neuronal degenerative diseases, neuronal microcircuits undergo severe structural alterations, leading to remodeling of synaptic connectivity. The functional consequences of such remodeling are mostly unknown. For instance, in mutant rd1 mouse retina, a common model for Retinitis Pigmentosa, rod bipolar cells (RBCs) establish contacts with remnant cone photoreceptors (cones) as a consequence of rod photoreceptor cell death and the resulting lack of presynaptic input. To assess the functional connectivity in the remodeled, light-insensitive outer rd1 retina, we recorded spontaneous population activity in retinal wholemounts using Ca2+ imaging and identified the participating cell types. Focusing on cones, RBCs and horizontal cells (HCs), we found that these cell types display spontaneous oscillatory activity and form synchronously active clusters. Overall activity was modulated by GABAergic inhibition from interneurons such as HCs and/or possibly interplexiform cells. Many of the activity clusters comprised both cones and RBCs. Opposite to what is expected from the intact (wild-type) cone-ON bipolar cell pathway, cone and RBC activity was positively correlated and, at least partially, mediated by glutamate transporters expressed on RBCs. Deletion of gap junctional coupling between cones reduced the number of clusters, indicating that electrical cone coupling plays a crucial role for generating the observed synchronized oscillations. In conclusion, degeneration-induced synaptic remodeling of the rd1 retina results in a complex self-sustained outer retinal oscillatory network, that complements (and potentially modulates) the recently described inner retinal oscillatory network consisting of amacrine, bipolar and ganglion cells.
Highlights
The mutant rd1 mouse (Bowes et al, 1990) is an intensively studied animal model for human Retinitis Pigmentosa-related retinal degeneration
We further show that correlated activity between cones and rod bipolar cells (RBCs) depends on glutamate transporters expressed by RBCs, suggesting the appearance of atypical, sign-conserving cone-RBC synapses in the remodeled outer rd1 retina
All neuron types of the rd1 outer retina (Figure 1B, cones, horizontal cells (HCs) and bipolar cells), are accessible from the distal retinal surface and their activity can be recorded in the Fura-2 loaded rd1 retinal wholemount using Ca2+ imaging (Figure 1C)
Summary
The mutant rd mouse (Bowes et al, 1990) is an intensively studied animal model for human Retinitis Pigmentosa-related retinal degeneration. Rod photoreceptors (rods) start degenerating around postnatal day 10 (P10) and are virtually absent by P21 (Carter-Dawson et al, 1978; Jimenez et al, 1996). During this progressive rod degeneration, cones, not directly affected by the rd mutation, undergo secondary degeneration. With the loss of cone outer segments after P24 (Lin et al, 2009), light-evoked retinal activity is absent in the rd retina (Stasheff, 2008), the disease leads to complete blindness within the first postnatal month. If spontaneous activity in the AII/ON-cone bipolar cell network of rd retina is intrinsic or modulated by RBCs has remained unclear
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