Back to Search Start Over

Functional Circuitry of the Retinal Ganglion Cell's Nonlinear Receptive Field

Authors :
L. Haarsma
Michael A. Freed
Jonathan B. Demb
Peter Sterling
Source :
The Journal of Neuroscience. 19:9756-9767
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Society for Neuroscience, 1999.

Abstract

A retinal ganglion cell commonly expresses two spatially overlapping receptive field mechanisms. One is the familiar “center/surround,” which sums excitation and inhibition across a region somewhat broader than the ganglion cell's dendritic field. This mechanism responds to a drifting grating by modulating firing at the drift frequency (linear response). Less familiar is the “nonlinear” mechanism, which sums the rectified output of many small subunits that extend for millimeters beyond the dendritic field. This mechanism responds to a contrast-reversing grating by modulating firing at twice the reversal frequency (nonlinear response). We investigated this nonlinear mechanism by presenting visual stimuli to the intact guinea pig retinain vitrowhile recording intracellularly from large brisk and sluggish ganglion cells. A contrast-reversing grating modulated the membrane potential (in addition to the firing rate) at twice the reversal frequency. This response was initially hyperpolarizing for some cells (either ON or OFF center) and initially depolarizing for others. Experiments in which responses to bars were summed in-phase or out-of-phase suggested that the single class of bipolar cells (either ON or OFF) that drives the center/surround response also drives the nonlinear response. Consistent with this, nonlinear responses persisted in OFF ganglion cells when ON bipolar cell responses were blocked byl-AP-4. Nonlinear responses evoked from millimeters beyond the ganglion cell were eliminated by tetrodotoxin. Thus, to relay the response from distant regions of the receptive field requires a spiking interneuron. Nonlinear responses from different regions of the receptive field added linearly.

Details

ISSN :
15292401 and 02706474
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3eef0f8a712d68a54b9e57d61002133c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.19-22-09756.1999