Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Ophthalmology Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

PDF

Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Ophthalmology

Quantal Amplitude At The Cone Ribbon Synapse Can Be Adjusted By Changes In Cytosolic Glutamate., Theodore M. Bartoletti, Wallace B. Thoreson Apr 2011

Quantal Amplitude At The Cone Ribbon Synapse Can Be Adjusted By Changes In Cytosolic Glutamate., Theodore M. Bartoletti, Wallace B. Thoreson

Journal Articles: Ophthalmology

PURPOSE: Vision is encoded at photoreceptor synapses by the number of released vesicles and size of the post-synaptic response. We hypothesized that elevating cytosolic glutamate could enhance quantal size by increasing glutamate in vesicles.

METHODS: We introduced glutamate (10-40 mM) into cone terminals through a patch pipette and recorded excitatory post-synaptic currents (EPSCs) from horizontal or OFF bipolar cells in the Ambystoma tigrinum retinal slice preparation.

RESULTS: Elevating cytosolic glutamate in cone terminals enhanced EPSCs as well as quantal miniature EPSCs (mEPSCs). Enhancement was prevented by inhibiting vesicular glutamate transport with 1S,3R-1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylate in the patch pipette. A low affinity glutamate …


Feedback From Horizontal Cells To Rod Photoreceptors In Vertebrate Retina., Wallace B. Thoreson, Norbert Babai, Theodore M M. Bartoletti May 2008

Feedback From Horizontal Cells To Rod Photoreceptors In Vertebrate Retina., Wallace B. Thoreson, Norbert Babai, Theodore M M. Bartoletti

Journal Articles: Ophthalmology

Retinal horizontal cells (HCs) provide negative feedback to cones, but, largely because annular illumination fails to evoke a depolarizing response in rods, it is widely believed that there is no feedback from HCs to rods. However, feedback from HCs to cones involves small changes in the calcium current (I(Ca)) that do not always generate detectable depolarizing responses. We therefore recorded I(Ca) directly from rods to test whether they were modulated by feedback from HCs. To circumvent problems presented by overlapping receptive fields of HCs and rods, we manipulated the membrane potential of voltage-clamped HCs while simultaneously recording from rods in …


Removal Of Extracellular Chloride Suppresses Transmitter Release From Photoreceptor Terminals In The Mudpuppy Retina., Wallace B. Thoreson, R . F. Miller May 1996

Removal Of Extracellular Chloride Suppresses Transmitter Release From Photoreceptor Terminals In The Mudpuppy Retina., Wallace B. Thoreson, R . F. Miller

Journal Articles: Ophthalmology

Removal of extracellular Cl- has been shown to suppress light-evoked voltage responses of ON bipolar and horizontal cells, but not photoreceptors or OFF bipolar cells, in the amphibian retina. A substantial amount of experimental evidence has demonstrated that the photoreceptor transmitter, L-glutamate, activates cation, not Cl-, channels in these cells. The mechanism for Cl-free effects was therefore reexamined in a superfused retinal slice preparation from the mudpuppy (Necturus maculosus) using whole-cell voltage and current clamp techniques. In a Cl-free medium, light-evoked currents were maintained in rod and cone photoreceptors but suppressed in horizontal, ON bipolar, and OFF bipolar cells. Changes …