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Publication : Control of dopamine release in the retina: a transgenic approach to neural networks.

First Author  Gustincich S Year  1997
Journal  Neuron Volume  18
Issue  5 Pages  723-36
PubMed ID  9182798 Mgi Jnum  J:157684
Mgi Id  MGI:4436731 Doi  10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80313-x
Citation  Gustincich S, et al. (1997) Control of dopamine release in the retina: a transgenic approach to neural networks. Neuron 18(5):723-36
abstractText  Dopaminergic, interplexiform amacrines (DA cells) were labeled in transgenic mice with human placental alkaline phosphatase, an enzyme that resides on the outer surface of the cell membrane. It was therefore possible to investigate their activity in vitro after dissociation of the retina with whole-cell current and voltage clamp, as well as their connections in the intact retina with the electron microscope. DA cells generate action potentials even in the absence of synaptic inputs. This activity is abolished by the amacrine cell transmitters GABA and glycine, which induce an inward current carried by chloride ions, and is stimulated by kainate, an agonist at the receptor for the bipolar cell transmitter glutamate, which opens nonselective cation channels. Since DA cells are postsynaptic to amacrine and bipolar cells, we suggest that the spontaneous discharge of DA cells is inhibited in the dark by GABAergic amacrines that receive their input from off-bipolars. Upon illumination, the GABA-inhibition is removed, DA cells generate action potentials, and their firing is modulated by the excitation received from on-bipolars.
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