Early Visual Motion Experience Improves Retinal Encoding of Motion Directions

The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Li ZhangYifeng Zhang

Abstract

Altered sensory experience in early life often leads to altered response properties of the sensory neurons. This process is mostly thought to happen in the brain, not in the sensory organs. We show that in the mouse retina of both sexes, exposed to a motion-dominated visual environment from eye-opening, the ON-OFF direction selective ganglion cells (ooDSGCs) develop significantly stronger direction encoding ability for motion in all directions. This improvement occurs independent of the motion direction used for training. We demonstrated that this enhanced ability to encode motion direction is mainly attributed to increased response reliability of ooDSGCs. Closer examination revealed that the excitatory inputs from the ON bipolar pathway showed enhanced response reliability after the motion experience training, while other synaptic inputs remain relatively unchanged. Our results demonstrate that retina adapts to the visual environment during neonatal development.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We found that retina, as the first stage of visual sensation, can also be affected by experience dependent plasticity during development. Exposure to a motion enriched visual environment immediately after eye-opening greatly improves motion direct...Continue Reading

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