Photoreceptive Ganglion Cells Drive Circuits for Local Inhibition in the Mouse Retina

Jan 5, 2021The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience

Light-sensitive retinal cells control local inhibition circuits in the mouse eye

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Abstract

M5 ipRGCs form electrical synapses with corticotropin-releasing hormone-expressing amacrine cells to modulate retinal neuron activity.

  • Intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) maintain light responses without input from traditional photoreceptors.
  • M5 ipRGCs exhibit specific anatomical and physiological connections with nonspiking GABAergic amacrine cells (CRHACs).
  • Pharmacological blockade reveals that visual responses in CRHACs depend on both melanopsin and gap junctions.
  • IpRGC-mediated input to CRHACs is weak or absent in the developing retina, suggesting a later role in maturation.
  • Optogenetic stimulation of CRHACs induces inhibitory postsynaptic currents in M4 and M5 ipRGCs but not in M1-M3 types.
  • These findings indicate a complex interaction among ipRGCs and interneurons, facilitating both feedforward and feedback inhibition in retinal circuits.

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