In the juvenile trkB knockout
(trkB−/−) mouse, retina synaptic
communication from rods to bipolar cells is severely compromised as
evidenced by a complete absence of electroretinogram (ERG)
b-wave, even though the inner retina appears anatomically
normal (Rohrer et al., 1999). Since it is
well known that the b-wave reflects light-dependent synaptic
activation of ON bipolar cells via their metabotropic
glutamate receptor, mGluR6, we sought to analyze the anatomical and
functional integrity of the glutamatergic synapses at these and other
bipolar cells in the trkB−/− mouse.
Although rod bipolar cells from wild-type juvenile mice were determined
to be immunopositive for trkB, postsynaptic metabotropic and ionotropic
glutamate receptor-mediated pathways in ON and OFF bipolar cells were
found to be functionally intact, based on patch electrode recordings,
using brief applications (“puffs”) of glutamate or its
analog, 2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (APB), a selective agonist for
mGluR6 receptors. Ionotropic glutamate receptor function was assayed in
OFF-cone bipolar and horizontal cells by applying exogenous
glutamatergic agonists in the presence of the channel-permeant
guanidinium analogue, 1-amino-4-guanidobutane (AGB).
Electron-microscopic analysis revealed that the ribbon synapses between
rods and postsynaptic rod bipolar and horizontal cells were formed at
the appropriate age and appear to be structurally intact, and
immunohistochemical analysis did not detect profound defects in the
expression of excitatory amino acid transporters involved in glutamate
clearance from the synaptic cleft. These data indicate that there does
not appear to be evidence for postsynaptic deficits in glutamatergic
signaling in the ON and OFF bipolar cells of mice lacking trkB.