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Journal ArticleDOI

Maturation of function in the developing rabbit retina.

Richard H. Masland
- 01 Oct 1977 - 
- Vol. 175, Iss: 3, pp 275-286
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TLDR
Retinas isolated from rabbits aged less than eight hours to adult were maintained in a flowing physiological medium and electroretinogram or activity of single ganglion cells were recorded, and receptive fields were studied using stimulation of the retina with focused light.
Abstract
Retinas isolated from rabbits aged less than eight hours to adult were maintained in a flowing physiological medium. The electroretinogram or activity of single ganglion cells were recorded, and receptive fields were studied using stimulation of the retina with focused light. Retinal activity was stable for at least eight hours of incubation. Retinal ganglion cells are electrophysiologically active on the first day of life. They generate spontaneous bursts of action potentials at rates of 10 to 30 spikes/ sec, separated by silent intervals of one to six minutes. Maintained trains of action potentials follow elevation of the concentration of K+ in the incubating medium to 10 mM. Ganglion cells are also stimulated by acetylcholine, with apparent threshols equal to or lower than those of ganglion cells in adult retinas. The first response of the retina to light is a small cornea-negative transretinal potential at day 6, presumably PIII of the electroretinogram. Responses of the ganglion cells are seen at eight days, but the responses are weak and adapt quickly to repeated stimulation. Many unresponsive cells are present. By ten days 60% of ganglion cells respond to light, and examples of mature receptive fields are present. Immature receptive fields at ten days fall into two rough classes, one characterized by a large responsive area with no antagonistic surround, and a second in which the surround can suppress the response to illumination of the center but can not itself cause a discharge. Immature fields are progressively replaced by mature ones, and by 20 days the qualitative organization of receptive fields is indistinguishable from adult.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Synchronous Bursts of Action Potentials in Ganglion Cells of the Developing Mammalian Retina

TL;DR: The development of orderly connections in the mammalian visual system depends on action potentials in the optic nerve fibers, even before the retina receives visual input, and correlated firing of retinal ganglion cells in the same eye directs the segregation of their synaptic terminals into eye-specific layers within the lateral geniculate nucleus.
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Retinal waves and visual system development

TL;DR: Waves are present in the developing retina of higher and lower vertebrates, which suggests that this form of activity may be a common and fundamental mechanism employed in the activity-dependent refinement of early patterns of visual connections.
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Prenatal Tetrodotoxin Infusion Blocks Segregation of Retinogeniculate Afferents

TL;DR: In the fetus, long before the onset of vision, spontaneous action potential activity is likely to be present in the visual system and to contribute to the segregation of the retinogeniculate pathway.
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A model for the development of simple cell receptive fields and the ordered arrangement of orientation columns through activity-dependent competition between ON- and OFF-center inputs

TL;DR: This hypothesis leads robustly to development of simple cell receptive fields selective for orientation and spatial frequency, and to the continuous and periodic arrangement of preferred orientation across the cortex.
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Ion channel development, spontaneous activity, and activity-dependent development in nerve and muscle cells.

TL;DR: The configuration of voltage- and ligand-gated ion channels that are expressed early in development regulate the timing and waveform of spontaneous activity and regulate Ca2+ influx during spontaneous activity, which is the first step in triggering activity-dependent developmental programs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields and functional architecture in two nonstriate visual areas (18 and 19) of the cat.

TL;DR: To UNDERSTAND VISION in physiological terms represents a formidable problem for the biologist, and one approach is to stimulate the retina with patterns of light while recording from single cells or fibers at various points along the visual pathway.
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields of cells in striate cortex of very young, visually inexperienced kittens.

TL;DR: The purpose was to learn the age at which cortical cells have normal, adult-type receptive fields, and to find out whether such fields exist even in animals that have had no patterned visual stimulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inherited retinal dystrophy in the rat.

TL;DR: Functional, chemical, and morphological data obtained in the rat indicated two main processes: (a) overproduction of rhodopsin and an associated abnormal lamellar tissue component, (b) progressive loss of photoreceptor cells.
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