Neuron
Volume 80, Issue 5, 4 December 2013, Pages 1159-1166
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Sensory Experience Shapes the Development of the Visual System’s First Synapse

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.09.024Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Visual experience differentially impacts rod and cone circuits

  • Maturation of ON cone bipolar cell light responses requires visual experience

  • Localization of mGluR6 to cone synapses is a light-dependent process

  • Sensory deprivation exerts differential effects on cone bipolar cell types

Summary

Specific connectivity patterns among neurons create the basic architecture underlying parallel processing in our nervous system. Here we focus on the visual system’s first synapse to examine the structural and functional consequences of sensory deprivation on the establishment of parallel circuits. Dark rearing reduces synaptic strength between cones and cone bipolar cells, a previously unappreciated effect of sensory deprivation. In contrast, rod bipolar cells, which utilize the same glutamate receptor to contact rods, are unaffected by dark rearing. Underlying the physiological changes, we find the localization of metabotropic glutamate receptors within cone bipolar, but not rod bipolar, cell dendrites is a light-dependent process. Furthermore, although cone bipolar cells share common cone partners, each bipolar cell type that we examined depends differentially on sensory input to achieve mature connectivity. Thus, visual experience differentially affects maturation of rod versus cone pathways and of cell types within the cone pathway.

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