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TNAP activity is localized at critical sites of retinal neurotransmission across various vertebrate species

Kantor, Orsolya; Varga, Alexandra; Kovacs-Oller, Tamas; Enzsoly, Anna; Balogh, Lajos; Baksa, Gabor; Szepessy, Zsuzsanna; Fonta, Caroline; Roe, Anna Wang; Nitschke, Roland; Szel, Agoston; Negyessy, Laszlo; Volgyi, Bela; Lukats, Akos
Evidence is emerging with regard to the role of tissue non-specific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) in neural functions. As an ectophosphatase, this enzyme might influence neural activity and synaptic transmission in diverse ways. The localization of the enzyme in known neural circuits, such as the retina, might significantly advance an understanding of its role in normal and pathological functioning. However, the presence of TNAP in the retina is scarcely investigated. Our multispecies comparative study (zebrafish, cichlid, frog, chicken, mouse, rat, golden hamster, guinea pig, rabbit, sheep, cat, dog, ferret, squirrel monkey, human) using enzyme histochemistry and Western blots has shown the presence of TNAP activity in the retina of several mammalian species, including humans. Although the TNAP activity pattern varies across species, we have observed the following trends: (1) in all investigated species (except golden hamster), retinal vessels display TNAP activity; (2) TNAP activity consistently occurs in the photoreceptor layer; (3) in majority of the investigated species, marked TNAP activity is present in the outer and inner plexiform layers. In zebrafish, frog, chicken, guinea pig, and rat, TNAP histochemistry has revealed several sublayers of the inner plexiform layer. Frog, golden hamster, guinea pig, mouse, and human retinas possess a subpopulation of amacrine cells positively staining for TNAP activity. The expression of TNAP in critical sites of retinal signal transmission across a wide range of species suggests its fundamental, evolutionally conserved role in vision.
PMID: 24988913
ISSN: 0302-766x
CID: 1065862

Gap junction-mediated death of retinal neurons is connexin and insult specific: a potential target for neuroprotection

Akopian, Abram; Atlasz, Tamas; Pan, Feng; Wong, Sze; Zhang, Yi; Volgyi, Bela; Paul, David L; Bloomfield, Stewart A
Secondary cell death via gap junctions (GJs) plays a role in the propagation of neuronal loss under a number of degenerative disorders. Here, we examined the role of GJs in neuronal death in the retina, which has arguably the most diverse expression of GJs in the CNS. Initially, we induced apoptotic death by injecting single retinal ganglion cells and glia with cytochrome C and found that this resulted in the loss of neighboring cells to which they were coupled via GJs. We next found that pharmacological blockade of GJs eradicated nearly all amacrine cell loss and reduced retinal ganglion cell loss by approximately 70% after induction of either excitotoxic or ischemic insult conditions. These data indicate that the GJ-mediated secondary cell death was responsible for the death of most cells. Whereas genetic deletion of the GJ subunit Cx36 increased cell survivability by approximately 50% under excitotoxic condition, cell loss in Cx45 knock-out mouse retinas was similar to that seen in wild-type mice. In contrast, ablation of Cx45 reduced neuronal loss by approximately 50% under ischemic insult, but ablation of Cx36 offered no protection. Immunolabeling of the connexins showed differential changes in protein expression consistent with their differing roles in propagating death signals under the two insults. These data indicate that secondary cell death is mediated by different cohorts of GJs dependent on the connexins they express and the type of initial insult. Our results suggest that targeting specific connexins offers a novel therapeutic strategy to reduce progressive cell loss under different neurodegenerative conditions.
PMCID:4200109
PMID: 25100592
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 1105552

Compartment-specific tyrosine hydroxylase-positive innervation to AII amacrine cells in the rabbit retina

Volgyi, B; Debertin, G; Balogh, M; Popovich, E; Kovacs-Oller, T
Tyrosine-hydroxylase-positive (TH(+)) amacrine cells release dopamine in a paracrine manner and also form GABA-ergic contact sites with inner retinal neurons. The best known sites are formed by TH(+) fibrous rings and AII amacrine cell somata in stratum 1 of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). An AII amacrine cell is a highly compartmentalized neuron with relatively large soma, a stout dendritic stalk and two sets of processes, one showing lobular appearance and extending horizontally in stratum 1 and a second transversally elongated group of fibers in strata 4 and 5. Although, all of these compartments have been reported as tic sites, it is uncertain if TH(+) amacrine cell inputs are homogeneously distributed or they rather target specific AII cell compartments. In this study we investigated the TH(+)/AII cell system by immunohistochemistry to map the potential synaptic contacts in the rabbit retina. We found numerous intimate contacts between the two amacrine cell populations throughout the IPL. However, TH(+) fibers favored the soma/main stalk region of AII amacrine cells and only contacted lobular appendages and transversal processes sporadically. In addition to the well-studied contacts between AII cell somata and TH(+) rings in stratum 1 we found that the main stalk region in stratum 3 serves as a secondary major target for TH(+) axons. These data thus clearly show that TH(+) contacts to AII amacrine cells are highly compartment specific.
PMID: 24704514
ISSN: 0306-4522
CID: 1059282

Gap junctional coupling in the vertebrate retina: variations on one theme?

Volgyi, Bela; Kovacs-Oller, Tamas; Atlasz, Tamas; Wilhelm, Marta; Gabriel, Robert
Gap junctions connect cells in the bodies of all multicellular organisms, forming either homologous or heterologous (i.e. established between identical or different cell types, respectively) cell-to-cell contacts by utilizing identical (homotypic) or different (heterotypic) connexin protein subunits. Gap junctions in the nervous system serve electrical signaling between neurons, thus they are also called electrical synapses. Such electrical synapses are particularly abundant in the vertebrate retina where they are specialized to form links between neurons as well as glial cells. In this article, we summarize recent findings on retinal cell-to-cell coupling in different vertebrates and identify general features in the light of the evergrowing body of data. In particular, we describe and discuss tracer coupling patterns, connexin proteins, junctional conductances and modulatory processes. This multispecies comparison serves to point out that most features are remarkably conserved across the vertebrate classes, including (i) the cell types connected via electrical synapses; (ii) the connexin makeup and the conductance of each cell-to-cell contact; (iii) the probable function of each gap junction in retinal circuitry; (iv) the fact that gap junctions underlie both electrical and/or tracer coupling between glial cells. These pan-vertebrate features thus demonstrate that retinal gap junctions have changed little during the over 500 million years of vertebrate evolution. Therefore, the fundamental architecture of electrically coupled retinal circuits seems as old as the retina itself, indicating that gap junctions deeply incorporated in retinal wiring from the very beginning of the eye formation of vertebrates. In addition to hard wiring provided by fast synaptic transmitter-releasing neurons and soft wiring contributed by peptidergic, aminergic and purinergic systems, electrical coupling may serve as the 'skeleton' of lateral processing, enabling important functions such as signal averaging and synchronization.
PMID: 23313713
ISSN: 1350-9462
CID: 386662

Gap junctions are essential for generating the correlated spike activity of neighboring retinal ganglion cells

Volgyi, Bela; Pan, Feng; Paul, David L; Wang, Jack T; Huberman, Andrew D; Bloomfield, Stewart A
Neurons throughout the brain show spike activity that is temporally correlated to that expressed by their neighbors, yet the generating mechanism(s) remains unclear. In the retina, ganglion cells (GCs) show robust, concerted spiking that shapes the information transmitted to central targets. Here we report the synaptic circuits responsible for generating the different types of concerted spiking of GC neighbors in the mouse retina. The most precise concerted spiking was generated by reciprocal electrical coupling of GC neighbors via gap junctions, whereas indirect electrical coupling to a common cohort of amacrine cells generated the correlated activity with medium precision. In contrast, the correlated spiking with the lowest temporal precision was produced by shared synaptic inputs carrying photoreceptor noise. Overall, our results demonstrate that different synaptic circuits generate the discrete types of GC correlated activity. Moreover, our findings expand our understanding of the roles of gap junctions in the retina, showing that they are essential for generating all forms of concerted GC activity transmitted to central brain targets.
PMCID:3720567
PMID: 23936012
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 495052

Development-related splicing regulates pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) receptors in the retina

Lakk, Monika; Szabo, Bence; Volgyi, Bela; Gabriel, Robert; Denes, Viktoria
PURPOSE: The ubiquitous pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP) has a disparate array of functions in development (e.g., proliferation and apoptosis). Among three types of PACAP receptor (VPAC1, VPAC2, and PAC1), PAC1 is subject to alternative splicing that generates isoforms. Although the literature documenting the presence of PACAP receptors in the central nervous system is vast, their expression during development has not been established yet. Here, we performed quantitative analyses on the expression of PACAP receptors during the postnatal development of the rat retina. METHODS: Retinas were harvested from postnatal days 0 to 20 (P0-P20). Using a comprehensive primer system, expression changes were followed employing quantitative real-time PCR. Changes at the protein level were detected by immunoblotting using anti-VPAC1, -VPAC2, and -PAC1 receptor antibodies. RESULTS: The expression of VPAC1 showed increases at P10 and P15. Peaks in VPAC2 expression were observed at P5 and P15. Using splicing variant-specific primers for PAC1 receptor, splicing regulation of Null, Hip, Hop1, and Hiphop1 variants was revealed in correlation with postnatal development. Transcript levels of the Null and Hip variants showed a decline, while Hop1 became the major PACAP receptor by P20. Hiphop1 transcript levels did not display remarkable changes except for a transient increase at P10. Immunoblotting confirmed the presence and expression level changes of the receptors. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that both VPAC1 and VPAC2 could have roles at all stages of retinal development, that PACAP acts through a specific set of PAC1 isoforms, and that Hip and Hop1 are predominantly involved in the postnatal development of rat retina.
PMID: 23099490
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 495172

Masked excitatory crosstalk between the ON and OFF visual pathways in the mammalian retina

Farajian, Reza; Pan, Feng; Akopian, Abram; Volgyi, Bela; Bloomfield, Stewart A
Abstract A fundamental organizing feature of the visual system is the segregation of ON and OFF responses into parallel streams to signal light increment and decrement. However, we found that blockade of GABAergic inhibition unmasks robust ON responses in OFF alpha-ganglion cells (alpha-GCs). These ON responses had the same centre-mediated structure as the classic OFF responses of OFF alpha-GCs, but were abolished following disruption of the ON pathway with l-AP4. Experiments showed that both GABA(A) and GABA(C) receptors are involved in the masking inhibition of this ON response, located at presynaptic inhibitory synapses on bipolar cell axon terminals and possibly amacrine cell dendrites. Since the dendrites of OFF alpha-GCs are not positioned to receive excitatory inputs from ON bipolar cell axon terminals in sublamina-b of the inner plexiform layer (IPL), we investigated the possibility that gap junction-mediated electrical synapses made with neighbouring amacrine cells form the avenue for reception of ON signals. We found that the application of gap junction blockers eliminated the unmasked ON responses in OFF alpha-GCs, while the classic OFF responses remained. Furthermore, we found that amacrine cells coupled to OFF alpha-GCs display processes in both sublaminae of the IPL, thus forming a plausible substrate for the reception and delivery of ON signals to OFF alpha-GCs. Finally, using a multielectrode array, we found that masked ON and OFF signals are displayed by over one-third of ganglion cells in the rabbit and mouse retinas, suggesting that masked crossover excitation is a widespread phenomenon in the inner mammalian retina
PMCID:3208219
PMID: 21768265
ISSN: 1469-7793
CID: 137837

Cadherin-6 mediates axon-target matching in a non-image-forming visual circuit

Osterhout, Jessica A; Josten, Nicko; Yamada, Jena; Pan, Feng; Wu, Shaw-Wen; Nguyen, Phong L; Panagiotakos, Georgia; Inoue, Yukiko U; Egusa, Saki F; Volgyi, Bela; Inoue, Takayoshi; Bloomfield, Stewart A; Barres, Ben A; Berson, David M; Feldheim, David A; Huberman, Andrew D
Neural circuits consist of highly precise connections among specific types of neurons that serve a common functional goal. How neurons distinguish among different synaptic targets to form functionally precise circuits remains largely unknown. Here, we show that during development, the adhesion molecule cadherin-6 (Cdh6) is expressed by a subset of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and also by their targets in the brain. All of the Cdh6-expressing retinorecipient nuclei mediate non-image-forming visual functions. A screen of mice expressing GFP in specific subsets of RGCs revealed that Cdh3-RGCs which also express Cdh6 selectively innervate Cdh6-expressing retinorecipient targets. Moreover, in Cdh6-deficient mice, the axons of Cdh3-RGCs fail to properly innervate their targets and instead project to other visual nuclei. These findings provide functional evidence that classical cadherins promote mammalian CNS circuit development by ensuring that axons of specific cell types connect to their appropriate synaptic targets
PMCID:3513360
PMID: 21867880
ISSN: 1097-4199
CID: 138009

Light increases the gap junctional coupling of retinal ganglion cells

Hu, Edward H; Pan, Feng; Volgyi, Bela; Bloomfield, Stewart A
We examined the effect of light adaptation on the gap junctional coupling of alpha-ganglion cells (alpha-GCs) in rabbit and mouse retinas. We assayed changes in coupling by measuring parameters of tracer coupling following injection of alpha-GCs with Neurobiotin and the concerted spike activity of alpha-GC neighbours under dark- and light-adapted conditions. We found that light adaptation using mesopic or photopic background lights resulted in a dramatic increase in the labelling intensity, number, and spatial extent of ganglion and amacrine cells coupled to OFF alpha-GCs when compared to levels seen under dark adaptation. While this augmentation of coupling by light did not produce an increase in the concerted spontaneous activity of OFF alpha-GC neighbours, it did significantly increase correlated light-evoked spiking. This was seen as an increase in the number of correlated spikes for alpha-GC neighbours and an extension of correlations to second-tier neighbours that was not seen under dark-adapted conditions. Pharmacological studies in the rabbit retina indicated that dopamine mediates the observed changes in coupling by differentially activating D1 and D2 receptors under different adaptation states. In this scheme, activation of dopamine D1 receptors following light exposure triggers cAMP-mediated intracellular pathways resulting in an increase in gap junctional conductance. Overall, our results indicate that as we move from night to day there is an enhanced electrical coupling between alpha-GCs, thereby increasing the concerted activity believed to strengthen the capacity and efficiency of information flow across the optic nerve
PMCID:3002447
PMID: 20819943
ISSN: 1469-7793
CID: 114174

Connexin36 is required for gap junctional coupling of most ganglion cell subtypes in the mouse retina

Pan, Feng; Paul, David L; Bloomfield, Stewart A; Volgyi, Bela
Converging evidence indicates that electrical synaptic transmission via gap junctions plays a crucial role in signal processing in the retina. In particular, amacrine and ganglion cells express numerous gap junctions, resulting in extensive electrical networks in the proximal retina. Both connexin36 (Cx36) and connexin45 (Cx45) subunits are widely distributed in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and therefore are likely contribute to gap junctions formed by a number of ganglion cell subtypes. In the present study, we used the gap junction-permeant tracer Neurobiotin to compare the coupling pattern of different ganglion cell subtypes in wild-type (WT) and Cx36 knockout (KO) mouse retinas. We found that homologous ganglion-to-ganglion cell coupling was lost for two subtypes after deletion of Cx36, whereas two other ganglion cell subtypes retained homologous coupling in the KO mouse. In contrast, deletion of Cx36 resulted in a partial or complete loss of ganglion-to-amacrine cell heterologous coupling in 9 of 10 ganglion cell populations studied. Overall, our results indicate that Cx36 is the predominant subunit of gap junctions in the proximal mouse retina, expressed by most ganglion cell subtypes, and thereby likely plays a major role in the concerted activity generated by electrical synapses
PMCID:2860380
PMID: 20058323
ISSN: 1096-9861
CID: 106370