Summary
This study characterizes embryonic Stage 1 retinal waves mediated by nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and gap junctions, finding they do not influence the developmental distribution of ipRGCs — the photoreceptors critical for circadian light entrainment. For lighting and circadian system designers, this suggests that ipRGC density regulation is a hardwired developmental process independent of spontaneous neural activity, implying the circadian photoreceptive substrate is robustly established regardless of early activity perturbations.
Key Findings
- Gap junction antagonist meclofenamic acid reduced frequency and size of Stage 1 waves but did not abolish them.
- General nAChR antagonist hexamethonium blocked Stage 1 waves entirely, while α4β2-specific antagonist dihydro-β-erythroidine did not, indicating involvement of multiple nAChR subtypes.
- In β2-nAChR knockout mice, Stage 1 waves were reduced but persisted under hexamethonium and were completely blocked by meclofenamic acid, indicating a compensatory shift to gap-junction-mediated activity.
- The developmental decrease in ipRGC density was preserved in both wild-type and β2-nAChR-KO mice, indicating that ipRGC spatial distribution is not regulated by spontaneous retinal activity.
Categories
The Science of Light: Examines the development of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) and how spontaneous retinal activity influences their spatial distribution during embryonic development.
Eye Health & Vision: Investigates embryonic retinal wave mechanisms and their role in early retinal development, with implications for understanding normal and abnormal visual system formation.
Author(s)
C Voufo, AQ Chen, BE Smith, MB Feller, A Tiriac
Publication Year
2022
Number of Citations
1
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