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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 1 January 2002, pp. 30-41
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Cellular Neurophysiology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kanazawa University, Ishikawa 920-8640; and 2Laboratory for Cellular Neurophysiology, Brain Science Institute, Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN), Saitama 351-0198, Japan
Tabata, Toshihide and
Masanobu Kano.
Heterogeneous Intrinsic Firing Properties of Vertebrate Retinal
Ganglion Cells. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 30-41, 2002. Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) use their
characteristic firing patterns to encode various aspects of visual
information and carry them to the brain. It has been thought that the
firing pattern of an RGC's light response is determined primarily by
the time course and spatiotemporal interaction of the synaptic inputs. However, it is unclear whether there is a difference in intrinsic firing properties among RGCs that could contribute to the cell-to-cell distinction of the light response firing pattern. We investigated the
intrinsic firing properties of isolated goldfish RGCs, minimizing cytoplasmic disturbance with a perforated-patch, whole-cell recording technique. In response to a 1-s depolarizing current step, the majority
of the examined RGCs (n = 84) displayed sustained
firing that lasted over 800 ms (n = 24; tonic RGCs)
or transient firing accommodated within 200 ms of the step onset
(n = 47; phasic RGCs). Tonic and phasic RGCs
also differed in their firing frequency-current intensity
dynamics. There was a significant difference in the soma sizes of
phasic and tonic RGCs, indicating that some parts of these groups
originate from distinct morphological subtypes. In the presence of
extracellular Ba2+ (1 mM), phasic RGCs displayed sustained
firing and firing frequency-current intensity dynamics similar to
those of tonic RGCs. Thus a Ba2+-sensitive ion current
(IBa-s) underlies the firing characteristics of phasic
RGCs. Under voltage-clamp conditions, IBa-s was identified as a low-threshold, noninactivating voltage-dependent K+
current. Because of its slow kinetics (time constant of activation, ~100 ms), IBa-s may confer a gradually increasing
hyperpolarizing driving force during maintained excitatory stimulus,
which eventually would result in firing accommodation. These findings
suggest that RGCs have heterogeneous intrinsic firing properties that
could aid synaptic inputs in shaping light responses.
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