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Dopaminergic control of light-adaptive synaptic plasticity and role in goldfish visual behavior.

Authors :
Yazulla S
Lin ZS
Studholme KM
Source :
Vision research [Vision Res] 1996 Dec; Vol. 36 (24), pp. 4045-57.
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

Dopamine has been implicated in processes of retinal light and dark adaptation. In goldfish retina, horizontal cell dendrites elaborate neurite processes (spinules) into cone terminals, in a light- and dopamine-dependent manner. However, the functions of retinal dopamine and the horizontal cell spinules in visual behavior are unknown. These issues were addressed in behavioral, electroretinographic, and anatomical studies of normal fish and those with unilateral depletion of retinal dopamine induced by intraocular (i.o.) injections with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). Dopamine interplexiform cells (DA-IPC) disappear within 2 weeks after 6-OHDA injection; cell bodies appear at the marginal zone within 6 weeks at which time neurites slowly reinnervate the retina with a sparse plexus over the next 12 months. We found that dopamine depletion increased light sensitivity at photopic but not scotopic backgrounds by 2.5 log units, an effect mimicked by i.o. injections of dopamine D1 and D2 antagonists. The ERG b-wave increment thresholds were the same for control and dopamine depleted eyes, indicating a normal transition from rod to cone systems in the ON pathway. Light-dependent spinule formation was reduced by about 60% in dopamine-depleted retinas, but returned to normal by 3 months and 9 months after injection in the entire retina, even areas not directly innervated with DA-IPC processes. Spinule formation in vivo was inhibited 50% with i.o. injection of SCH 23390 in control retinas as well as throughout 3 month 6-OHDA injected retinas, including DA-IPC free areas. This latter result indicates a volume effect of dopamine, diffusing laterally through the retina over several millimeters, in regulating spinules. We conclude that DA-IPCs regulate sensitivity to background at photopic levels not via the ON pathway, but perhaps the OFF pathway. Goldfish display both increased sensitivity to light and a normal Purkinje shift in the ERG b-wave whether or not horizontal cell spinules are present, indicating that dopamine control of photopic vision in fish is not mediated through light-induced spinule formation of horizontal cell dendrites.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0042-6989
Volume :
36
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Vision research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9068857
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0042-6989(96)00128-9