Pottek Mark, Knop Gabriel C, Weiler Reto, Dedek Karin
Department of Neurobiology, University of Oldenburg.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Nov 14(57):3457. doi: 10.3791/3457.
Studying the physiological properties and synaptic connections of specific neurons in the intact tissue is a challenge for those cells that lack conspicuous morphological features or show a low population density. This applies particularly to retinal amacrine cells, an exceptionally multiform class of interneurons that comprise roughly 30 subtypes in mammals(1). Though being a crucial part of the visual processing by shaping the retinal output(2), most of these subtypes have not been studied up to now in a functional context because encountering these cells with a recording electrode is a rare event. Recently, a multitude of transgenic mouse lines is available that express fluorescent markers like green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the control of promoters for membrane receptors or enzymes that are specific to only a subset of neurons in a given tissue(3,4). These pre-labeled cells are therefore accessible to directed microelectrode targeting under microscopic control, permitting the systematic study of their physiological properties in situ. However, excitation of fluorescent markers is accompanied by the risk of phototoxicity for the living tissue. In the retina, this approach is additionally hampered by the problem that excitation light causes appropriate stimulation of the photoreceptors, thus inflicting photopigment bleaching and transferring the retinal circuits into a light-adapted condition. These drawbacks are overcome by using infrared excitation delivered by a mode-locked laser in short pulses of the femtosecond range. Two-photon excitation provides energy sufficient for fluorophore excitation and at the same time restricts the excitation to a small tissue volume minimizing the hazards of photodamage(5). Also, it leaves the retina responsive to visual stimuli since infrared light (>850 nm) is only poorly absorbed by photopigments(6). In this article we demonstrate the use of a transgenic mouse retina to attain electrophysiological in situ recordings from GFP-expressing cells that are visually targeted by two-photon excitation. The retina is prepared and maintained in darkness and can be subjected to optical stimuli which are projected through the condenser of the microscope (Figure 1). Patch-clamp recording of light responses can be combined with dye filling to reveal the morphology and to check for gap junction-mediated dye coupling to neighboring cells, so that the target cell can by studied on different experimental levels.
对于那些缺乏明显形态特征或细胞群体密度较低的细胞而言,在完整组织中研究特定神经元的生理特性和突触连接是一项挑战。这尤其适用于视网膜无长突细胞,这是一类形态异常多样的中间神经元,在哺乳动物中大约包含30种亚型(1)。尽管它们通过塑造视网膜输出在视觉处理中起着关键作用(2),但到目前为止,由于用记录电极碰到这些细胞的情况很少见,大多数这些亚型尚未在功能背景下得到研究。最近,有大量转基因小鼠品系可供使用,这些品系在膜受体或酶的启动子控制下表达绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)等荧光标记,这些膜受体或酶仅对给定组织中的一部分神经元具有特异性(3,4)。因此,这些预先标记的细胞可以在显微镜控制下进行定向微电极靶向,从而可以系统地原位研究它们的生理特性。然而,荧光标记的激发伴随着对活组织产生光毒性的风险。在视网膜中,这种方法还受到另一个问题的阻碍,即激发光会对光感受器产生适当的刺激,从而导致光色素漂白并使视网膜回路进入光适应状态。通过使用锁模激光器在飞秒范围内的短脉冲中提供的红外激发,可以克服这些缺点。双光子激发提供了足以激发荧光团的能量,同时将激发限制在小的组织体积内,从而将光损伤的风险降至最低(5)。此外,由于红外光(>850nm)仅被光色素微弱吸收(6),它使视网膜对视觉刺激保持反应性。在本文中,我们展示了使用转基因小鼠视网膜从通过双光子激发进行视觉靶向的表达GFP的细胞中获得电生理原位记录。视网膜在黑暗中制备并维持,可以受到通过显微镜聚光镜投射的光学刺激(图1)。光反应的膜片钳记录可以与染料填充相结合,以揭示形态并检查间隙连接介导的染料与相邻细胞的偶联,从而可以在不同的实验水平上研究靶细胞。