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Passive membrane properties and electrotonic signal processing in retinal rod bipolar cells
Rod bipolar cells transmit visual signals from their dendrites, where they receive input from rod photoreceptors, to their axon terminals, where they synapse onto amacrine cells. Little is known, however, about the transmission and possible transformation of these signals. We have combined axon term...
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Published in: | The Journal of physiology 2009-02, Vol.587 (4), p.829-849 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Rod bipolar cells transmit visual signals from their dendrites, where they receive input from rod photoreceptors, to their
axon terminals, where they synapse onto amacrine cells. Little is known, however, about the transmission and possible transformation
of these signals. We have combined axon terminal recording in retinal slices, quantitative, light-microscopic morphological
reconstruction and computer modelling to obtain detailed compartmental models of rat rod bipolar cells. Passive cable properties
were estimated by directly fitting the current responses of the models evoked by voltage pulses to the physiologically recorded
responses. At a holding potential of â60 mV, the average best-fit parameters were 1.1 μF cm â2 for specific membrane capacitance ( C m ), 130 Ω cm for cytoplasmic resistivity ( R i ), and 24 kΩ cm 2 for specific membrane resistance ( R m ). The passive integration of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs was examined by computer modelling with physiologically
realistic synaptic conductance waveforms. For both transient and steady-state synaptic inhibition, the inhibitory effect was
relatively insensitive to the location of the inhibition. For transient synaptic inhibition, the time window of effective
inhibition depended critically on the relative timing of inhibition and excitation. The passive signal transmission between
soma and axon terminal was examined by the electrotonic transform and quantified as the frequency-dependent voltage attenuation
of sinusoidal voltage waveforms. For the range of parameters explored (axon diameter and length, R i ), the lowest cutoff frequency observed was â¼300 Hz, suggesting that realistic scotopic visual signals will be faithfully
transmitted from soma to axon terminal, with minimal passive attenuation along the axon. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2008.165415 |