In the retina, nitric oxide (NO) functions in network
coupling, light adaptation, neurotransmitter receptor function,
and synaptic release. Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)
is present in the retina of every vertebrate species investigated.
However, although nNOS can be found in every retinal cell
type, little is known about the production of NO in specific
cells or about the diffusion of NO within the retina. We
used diaminofluorescein-2 (DAF-2) to image real-time NO
production in turtle retina in response to stimulation
with N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA). In response to NMDA,
NO was produced in somata in the ganglion cell and inner
nuclear layers, in synaptic boutons and processes in the
inner plexiform layer, in processes in the outer plexiform
layer, and in photoreceptor inner segments. This NO-dependent
fluorescence production quickly reached transient peaks
and declined more slowly toward baseline levels at different
rates in different cells. In some cases, the NO signal
was primarily confined to within 10 μm of the source,
which suggests that NO may not diffuse freely through the
retina. Such limited spread was not predicted and suggests
that NO signal transduction may be more selective than
suggested, and that NO may play significant intracellular
roles in cells that produce it. Because NO-dependent fluorescence
within amacrine cells can be confined to the soma, specific
dendritic sites, or both with distinct kinetics, NO may
function at specific synapses, modulate gene expression,
or coordinate events throughout the cell.