Pu M, Berson D M, Pan T
Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912.
J Neurosci. 1994 Jul;14(7):4338-58. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.14-07-04338.1994.
We have examined in vitro the morphology and visual response properties of retinal ganglion cells innervating a component of the cat's lateral geniculate nucleus known as the geniculate wing (or retinorecipient zone of the pulvinar). Ganglion cells were first labeled in situ by retrograde transport of fluorescent microspheres from the geniculate wing. Labeled cells were injected intracellular with Lucifer yellow and biocytin in the isolated retina and visualized immunohistochemically. With one exception, stained cells appeared to belong to a single morphological class that corresponded closely to the epsilon cell of earlier descriptions (Leventhal et al., 1980; Rodieck and Watanabe, 1986). They had somas comparable in size to those of beta cells and large, sparse dendritic trees that ramified in the inner (ON) sublayer of the inner plexiform layer. Dendritic fields increased in size with eccentricity, but only within the central retina, and were among the largest so far reported for cat ganglion cells, exceeding those of alpha cells at most eccentricities. Dendritic profiles were typically elliptical with long axes pointing toward the area centralis. Axons were about as thick as those of beta cells and thicker than those of other varieties of non-alpha, non-beta ganglion cells. We recorded extracellularly from microsphere-labeled wing-projecting ganglion cells in a superfused, flattened eyecup preparation. All such cells exhibited sustained responses to standing contrast and had very large, concentric receptive fields with ON-centers and OFF-surrounds. Their response to gratings showed that they have relatively poor spatial resolution and a moderate amount of nonlinearity of spatial summation. These cells thus have many physiological response properties in common with ganglion cells previously termed "on-center tonic W-cells," "on-center sluggish sustained cells," and "Q-cells." These findings indicate that ganglion cells innervating the cat's geniculate wing form a structurally and functionally homogeneous class. Their large dendritic and receptive fields and low-pass spatial frequency tuning suggest that fine spatial resolution is not required for the execution of their functional role(s).
我们在体外研究了支配猫外侧膝状体一个被称为膝状翼(或丘脑枕的视网膜接受区)的成分的视网膜神经节细胞的形态和视觉反应特性。首先通过荧光微球从膝状翼的逆行运输在原位标记神经节细胞。在分离的视网膜中,对标记的细胞进行细胞内注射路西法黄和生物素,并通过免疫组织化学进行观察。除一个例外,染色的细胞似乎属于单一的形态学类别,与早期描述的ε细胞(Leventhal等人,1980年;Rodieck和渡边,1986年)非常相似。它们的胞体大小与β细胞的胞体相当,并且有大而稀疏的树突树,在内网状层的内层(ON)亚层中分支。树突野的大小随着离心率增加,但仅在中央视网膜内,并且是迄今为止报道的猫神经节细胞中最大的之一,在大多数离心率下超过α细胞的树突野。树突轮廓通常是椭圆形的,长轴指向中央凹。轴突的粗细与β细胞的轴突相当,比其他非α、非β神经节细胞的轴突粗。我们在灌注的扁平眼杯标本中对微球标记的投射到膝状翼的神经节细胞进行了细胞外记录。所有这些细胞对持续对比度表现出持续反应,并且具有非常大的同心感受野,中心为ON,周围为OFF。它们对光栅的反应表明它们的空间分辨率相对较差,并且空间总和的非线性程度适中。因此,这些细胞与先前被称为“中心ON紧张性W细胞”、“中心ON迟缓持续细胞”和“Q细胞”的神经节细胞具有许多共同的生理反应特性。这些发现表明,支配猫膝状翼的神经节细胞形成了一个结构和功能上均一的类别。它们大的树突和感受野以及低通空间频率调谐表明,执行其功能作用不需要精细的空间分辨率。