• Neuroscience · Dec 2012

    GABAergic control of retinal ganglion cell dendritic development.

    • F P Chabrol, S J Eglen, and E Sernagor.
    • Institute of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, Framlington Place, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH, UK.
    • Neuroscience. 2012 Dec 27;227:30-43.

    AbstractDeveloping GABAergic neurons mature long before excitatory neurons, and early GABA(A) activity exerts important paracrine effects while neurons extend dendrites and axons and they establish neural connections. One of the unique features of early GABA(A) activity is that it induces membrane depolarization and Ca(2+) influx and it shifts to inhibition when networks mature. Although it has been demonstrated in several systems that early GABA(A) signaling plays a fundamental role in guiding neurite outgrowth, it has never been investigated in the retina. Here we show that chronic GABAergic activity is required for the stabilization and maintenance of newly formed dendritic branches in developing turtle retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in ovo. Blocking GABA(A) receptors with bicuculline or inhibiting GABA synthesis with l-allylglycine have contrasting effects on dendritic growth and branching in biocytin-labeled RGCs. Dendritic arbor reconstruction shows that bicuculline induces dendritic branch loss without global change in the extent of dendritic fields while l-allylglycine causes the entire tree to shrink. At the same time, multielectrode array recordings and Ca(2+) imaging show that l-allylglycine has similar effects to bicuculline (Leitch et al., 2005) on overall network excitability, preventing the disappearance of immature retinal waves of activity and the GABAergic polarity shift. This study demonstrates for the first time that GABA plays an important role in vivo in stabilizing developing dendrites into mature arbors in the retina. However, the way GABA influences dendritic growth appears to be driven by complex mechanisms that cannot be explained solely on the basis of overall network activity levels.Copyright © 2012 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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