Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4012082 Experimental Eye Research 2008 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the contributions of postreceptoral neurons to the light-adapted ERG of the Nob mouse, a model for complete-type congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB1) that lacks a b-wave from depolarizing bipolar cells. Ganzfeld ERGs were recorded from anesthetized adult control mice, control mice injected intravitreally with l-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (Control APB mice) to remove On pathway activity, and Nob mice. ERGs also were recorded after PDA (cis-2,3-piperidine-dicarboxylic acid, 3–5 mM) was injected to block transmission to hyperpolarizing (Off) bipolar and horizontal cells, and all third-order neurons. Stimuli were brief (<4 ms, 0.4–2.5 log sc td s) and long (200 ms, 2.5–4.6 log sc td) LED flashes (λmax = 513 nm, on a rod suppressing background (2.6 log sc td). Sinusoidal modulation of the LEDs (mean, 2.6 log sc td; contrast, 100%; 3–36 Hz) was used to study flicker ERGs. Brief-flash ERGs of Nob mice presented as long-lasting negative waves with a positive-going intrusion that started about 50 ms after the flash and peaked around 120 ms. Control APB mice had similar responses, and in both cases, PDA removed the positive-going intrusion. For long flashes, PDA removed a small, slow “d-wave” after light offset. With sinusoidal stimulation, the fundamental (F1) amplitude of control mice ERG peaked at 8 Hz (∼70 μV). For Nob mice the peak was ∼20 μV at 6 Hz before PDA and ∼10 μV at 3 Hz or lower after PDA. F1 responses were present up to 21 Hz in control and Nob eyes and 15 Hz in Nob eyes after PDA. Between 3 and 6 Hz, F1 phase was 170–210° more delayed in Nob than control mice; phase was hardly altered by PDA. With vector analysis, a substantial postreceptoral input to the Nob flicker ERG was revealed. In control mice, the second harmonic (F2) response showed peaks of ∼10 μV at 3 Hz and 13 Hz. Nob mice showed almost no F2. In summary, in this study it was found that in Nob mice, postreceptoral neurons from the Off pathway make a positive-going contribution to the light-adapted flash ERG, and contribute substantially to sinusoidal flicker ERG.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology and Microbiology (General)
Authors
, , , ,