Four alpha ganglion cell types in mouse retina: Function, structure, and molecular signatures
Abstract
The retina communicates with the brain using ≥30 parallel channels, each carried by axons of distinct types of retinal ganglion cells. In every mammalian retina one finds so-called "alpha" ganglion cells (αRGCs), identified by their large cell bodies, stout axons, wide and mono-stratified dendritic fields, and high levels of neurofilament protein. In the mouse, three αRGC types have been described based on responses to light steps: On-sustained, Off-sustained, and Off-transient. Here we employed a transgenic mouse line that labels αRGCs in the live retina, allowing systematic targeted recordings. We characterize the three known types and identify a fourth, with On-transient responses. All four αRGC types share basic aspects of visual signaling, including a large receptive field center, a weak antagonistic surround, and absence of any direction selectivity. They also share a distinctive waveform of the action potential, faster than that of other RGC types. Morphologically, they differ in the level of dendritic stratification within the IPL, which accounts for their response properties. Molecularly, each type has a distinct signature. A comparison across mammals suggests a common theme, in which four large-bodied ganglion cell types split the visual signal into four channels arranged symmetrically with respect to polarity and kinetics.
Additional Information
© 2017 Krieger et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Editor: Steven Barnes, Dalhousie University, CANADA Received: November 11, 2016. Accepted: June 11, 2017. Published: July 28, 2017. Thanks to Max Joesch for contributing neural recording data. Funding: Supported by NIH grants 1U01NS090562 to M.M., NS029169 and EY022073 to J.R.S, and EY025119 to D.L.R. Author Contributions Conceptualization: BK MQ JS MM. Data curation: BK MQ DR MM. Formal analysis: BK MQ DR JS MM. Funding acquisition: DR JS MM. Investigation: BK MQ DR. Methodology: BK DR JS MM. Project administration: JS MM. Software: BK DR MM. Supervision: JS MM. Validation: JS MM. Visualization: BK MM. Writing – original draft: BK MM. Writing – review & editing: BK MQ DR JS MM.Attached Files
Published - journal.pone.0180091.pdf
Supplemental Material - pone.0180091.s001.tiff
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:4a9b8f48c2e4354482a11fa2e37545e3
|
10.5 MB | Preview Download |
md5:d44994857a0c3fa7444a31b987ac39f7
|
4.2 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC5533432
- Eprint ID
- 79848
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170807-132930354
- NIH
- 1U01NS090562
- NIH
- NS029169
- NIH
- EY022073
- NIH
- EY025119
- Created
-
2017-08-07Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-15Created from EPrint's last_modified field