Summary

Transretinal ERG Recordings from Mouse Retina: Rod and Cone Photoresponses

Published: March 14, 2012
doi:

Summary

We describe a relatively simple method of transretinal electroretinogram (ERG) recordings for obtaining rod and cone photoresponses from intact mouse retina. This approach takes advantage of the block of synaptic transmission from photoreceptors to isolate their light responses and record them using field electrodes placed across the isolated flat-mounted retina.

Abstract

There are two distinct classes of image-forming photoreceptors in the vertebrate retina: rods and cones. Rods are able to detect single photons of light whereas cones operate continuously under rapidly changing bright light conditions. Absorption of light by rod- and cone-specific visual pigments in the outer segments of photoreceptors triggers a phototransduction cascade that eventually leads to closure of cyclic nucleotide-gated channels on the plasma membrane and cell hyperpolarization. This light-induced change in membrane current and potential can be registered as a photoresponse, by either classical suction electrode recording technique1,2 or by transretinal electroretinogram recordings (ERG) from isolated retinas with pharmacologically blocked postsynaptic response components3-5. The latter method allows drug-accessible long-lasting recordings from mouse photoreceptors and is particularly useful for obtaining stable photoresponses from the scarce and fragile mouse cones. In the case of cones, such experiments can be performed both in dark-adapted conditions and following intense illumination that bleaches essentially all visual pigment, to monitor the process of cone photosensitivity recovery during dark adaptation6,7. In this video, we will show how to perform rod- and M/L-cone-driven transretinal recordings from dark-adapted mouse retina. Rod recordings will be carried out using retina of wild type (C57Bl/6) mice. For simplicity, cone recordings will be obtained from genetically modified rod transducin α-subunit knockout (-/-) mice which lack rod signaling8.

Protocol

1. Making Electrodes

  1. Prepare glass electrodes. Weigh 120 mg agar and mix it in 10 mL distilled water (final agar concentration 1.2%). Melt the agar solution in hot water bath. Fill glass capillaries (we use Word Presision Instruments TW100-4 capillaries with the following dimensions: length = 100 mm, OD/ID = 1/0.75 mm, and internal volume = 44 μL) with the agar solution using plastic syringe. Solidify the agar at room temperature for 10 min. Thus, up to ~200 capillaries can be filled (the rest of the agar mixture can be stored at -4 °C and re-used several times).
  2. Cut the capillaries into halves using a diamond knife.
  3. Soak the resulting glass electrodes in mouse electrode solution for at least 24 hours at 4 °C. Store the electrodes at 4 °C and use them over the period of 3-4 months.

2. Setting up the Experiment

  1. Dark-adapt a mouse overnight. Use wild type (for instance, C57Bl/6) mice for rod-driven transretinal recordings and Tα-/- mice lacking rod signaling8 for cone transretinal recordings.
  2. Prepare 1 L perfusion solution, 100 mL electrode solution, and 20 mL incubation solution (see below) and filter the perfusion solution trough a Millipore 0.45 μm or 0.22 μm filter (optional).
  3. Calibrate the light source (505-nm LED or halogen bulb optical stimulator) using a photometer placed at the plane of the retina. In the case of LED light source, use an optical diffuser to achieve light uniformity.
  4. Prepare the perfusion chamber for experiment (chamber constructions may vary). Our chamber is made of 3 mm Plexiglas, with a bottom made from the lid of a small plastic Petri dish, and has an active perfusion volume of ~400 μL (L = 25 mm, W = 8 mm, H ≈ 2 mm). Fill the lower electrode space of the chamber with electrode solution containing 2 mM L-glutamate and 10 mM BaCl2. Using plastic tubing and a glass capillary, make a connection between the solution in lower electrode space (made of plastic tubing connector attached to the chamber bottom) and the electrode holder. Make sure there are no bubbles in the electrode, the connecting tubing, or the electrode holder (purge the solution using plastic syringe if needed).
  5. Mount the recording chamber on the stage of the microscope (optional: the microscope can be mounted on an anti-vibration table and shielded within a Faraday cage to minimize mechanical and electromagnetic noise). Connect the lower electrode holder to the positive headstage pole of the differential amplifier (e.g. Warner Instruments DP-311 amplifier). Center and align the chamber lower electrode opening with the stimulus light spot. Connect the perfusion line to the recording chamber and turn the perfusion on.
  6. Bubble the perfusion solution with 95% O2/5% CO2 while incubating it in 40 °C water bath. CO2 adjusts the pH of the solution to 7.2. The solution flows from the bottle to the recording chamber by gravity passing through a ceramic resistor reheating it to 36-37 °C. To reduce heat loss, the heater should be located as close to the recording chamber as possible, ideally on the stage of the microscope.
  7. With a flow regulator adjust the flow rate to about 1 mL/min.
  8. Connect the upper electrode to the second (negative) pole of the headstage using a second electrode holder. Bind the thermocouple probe to the upper electrode using an O-ring. Make sure that the electrode and thermocouple tips are close together so that the temperature reading is taken as close to the center of the retina as possible. Immerse the tip of the upper electrode in the perfusion solution and place it in the center of the chamber. Allow 10-15 min for baseline stabilization.
  9. Adjust the DC voltage for the heater so that the temperature of the solution is 36-37 °C.

3. Isolating the Mouse Retina

  1. Under dim red light, euthanize the dark-adapted mouse with CO2 and cervical dislocation. Optional: make a reference mark on each mouse eyeball by cauterizing the most dorsal point of the sclera with a cautery pen or heated dissecting pin. All subsequent procedures are performed under infrared light using infrared image converters fit to a dissecting microscope.
  2. Dissect out the eyes with curved scissors by applying gentle pressure and stretching the skin on the sides of each eye. Hemisect both eyeballs under infrared illumination using microscissors or a razor blade.
  3. Remove the cornea and lens. Remove as much of the vitreous as possible.
  4. Peel the first retina from the pigment epithelium layer and, if necessary, thoroughly clean it with forceps to remove remaining granules of pigment epithelium. We are typically using whole retina for both rod and cone transretinal recordings. However, if you wish to specifically record from the dorsal part of mouse retina that has more M/L-cones9, before peeling the retina remove the ventral part of the eyecup with a razor blade or microscissors using the cautery mark as a reference.
  5. Place the second hemisected eyeball in a small Petri dish with incubation solution and incubate the preparation in a light-tight box saturated with pure oxygen until use. Typically, under these conditions the second mouse eyecup can be stored for several hours at room temperature and used for recordings.
  6. Using a glass or plastic pipette transfer the isolated retina to a drop of perfusion solution (ca. 300 μl) on the lid of a Petri dish. Add 5-6 small drops of electrode solution containing BaCl2 to pre-incubate the retina with BaCl2. Place a square piece (ca. 5×5 mm) of back side corner-greased (we use Dow corning 111 valve lubricant and sealant) Millipore filter paper (0.45 μm HARG type) with pre-made hole in its center (2-2.5 mm in diameter) to the same solution drop. Using forceps position the retina on top of the filter paper (photoreceptor side up) and press its edges on the periphery to flat-mount it. The retina should be centered over the opening in the filter paper.
  7. Using forceps transfer the filter paper with the retina to the perfusion chamber and place it above the stimulus spot-aligned lower electrode space. Slightly press the greased edges of the filter paper to bond it with the chamber.
  8. Place the upper electrode over the retina center (slightly touch the photoreceptor layer). Centering the upper electrode on the retina increases the signal amplitude (up to ~20-40% as compared to placing it closer to the retina edge). Although such electrode location distorts slightly the effective light stimulus intensity reaching a small sector of the retina (~12-15% of its total area), it is still the optimal way of placing the electrode. The preparation is now ready for transretinal recordings.

4. Transretinal Recordings

  1. Depending on your mouse line, record rod or M/L-cone-driven test flash responses from dim to bright intensity of calibrated 505 nm light provided from LED light source or optical stimulator. In the case of our LED light source, the flash intensity is controlled by a combination of computerized control of LED input voltage, switchable resistors, and a set of neutral density filters (we use E-Colour #211 0.9 ND film filters from Rosco Laboratories) placed between the LED and the retina. The duration of the LED test flash (20 ms) is controlled by a computer. If using a halogen bulb optical stimulator, test flash intensity and wavelength can be controlled by a set of neutral density filters and narrow band interference filters, respectively. Test flash duration can be controlled by computer-driven shutters.
  2. Optional: for maintaining efficient suppression of the glial component of photoresponse with BaCl2 throughout the day, change the lower electrode solution occasionally (e.g. prior to testing each retina) by purging it using a plastic syringe filled with fresh solution.

5. Representative Results

Solutions

  1. Mouse retina perfusion solution: 112.5 mM NaCl, 3.6 mM KCl, 2.4 mM MgCl2, 1.2 mM CaCl2, 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 20 mM NaHCO3, 3 mM Na succinate, 0.5 mM Na glutamate, 0.02 mM EDTA, and 10 mM glucose. In addition, the solution is supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamate and 10 μM DL-AP-4 to block higher order components of the photoresponse10,11, and with 0.1% MEM vitamins and MEM amino acids solutions (Sigma) to improve retina viability.
  2. Mouse electrode solution: 140 mM NaCl, 3.6 mM KCl, 2.4 mM MgCl2, 1.2 mM CaCl2, 3 mM HEPES (pH 7.4, NaOH). The solution in the lower electrode space also contains 2 mM L-glutamate to block the synaptic transmission10 and, in addition, 10 mM BaCl2 to suppress the glial component of the photoresponse3,12.
  3. Retina incubation solution: dissolve 272 mg L-15 medium (Sigma) and 20 mg BSA in 20 mL deionized water. Final L-15 and BSA concentrations are 13.6 mg/mL and 1 mg/mL, respectively. Adjust pH to 7.4 with 1 M HCl.

Figure 1.
Figure 1. Schematic diagram showing the isolation of mouse retina for transretinal ERG recordings.

Figure 2.
Figure 2. Photograph of the perfusion chamber and recording electrodes with their holders. Red arrows indicate the direction of perfusion flow.

Figure 3.
Figure 3. Schematic diagram of the experimental setup for transretinal ERG recordings. Red arrows indicate the direction of perfusion flow.

Figure 4.
Figure 4. Representative results: recorded family of mouse rod-driven transretinal responses. Photoresponses were low-pass filtered at 30 Hz (8-pole Bessel), digitized at 1 kHz and stored on a computer for further analysis. Shown traces represent averages of 5-6 responses at dim light intensities and 2-3 responses at saturating light intensities.

Figure 5.
Figure 5. Representative results: recorded family of mouse cone-driven transretinal responses. Photoresponses were low-pass filtered at 30 Hz (8-pole Bessel), digitized at 1 kHz and stored on a computer for further analysis. Shown traces are averages of 5-10 responses at dim light intensities and 3-5 responses at saturating light intensities.

Discussion

The method of rod- and cone-driven transretinal ERG recordings described above is becoming a powerful tool for investigating the function of mouse photoreceptors in both wild type and genetically modified animals. In addition to the easy characterization of basic photoresponse properties, this simple technique provides great response stability during long-lasting experiments performed on close-to-intact retina preparations. Both dark-adapted rod maximal response amplitude and photosensitivity in wild type mice are stable within at least 1h from the beginning of recordings, and the dark-adapted cone maximal amplitude and photosensitivity typically do not decline more than 10% after 30-40 min of recordings. Other advantages of this technique are its amenability to easy pharmacological manipulations that is unreachable in classical single-cell suction recordings from mouse photoreceptors, and the absence of anesthesia, required for performing live animal ERG recordings. Using retinas of Tα-/- mouse line with eliminated rod signaling8 for cone transretinal recordings substantially facilitates both experimental procedures and interpretation of the results. This is particularly important in experiments aimed at monitoring mouse cone visual pigment regeneration after exposure to bright illumination and/or studying cone function in the presence of steady background light. Thus, new exciting perspectives are now opening for investigating the physiological properties of mouse rods and cones including mouse models for rod- and cone-related visual disorders.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

Supported by Career Development Award from Research to Prevent Blindness, NIH grants EY19312 and EY19543 (VJK), as well as by unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent Blindness and EY02687 (Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at Washington University).

Materials

Material Name Type Company Catalogue Number Comment
DL-AP-4   TOCRIS bioscience 0101  
All other reagents   Sigma-Aldrich    
Glass capillaries   World Precision Instruments TW100-4 For making electrodes
Filter paper HARG Millipore HABG01300  
Photometer   UDT Instruments S350 For light calibration
Radiometric silicon sensor   UDT Instruments 221 For light calibration
Anti-vibration table   Technical Manufacturing Corporation TMC 78-239-02R, TMC63-26012-01 To minimize mechanical noise
Air compressor Panther P 15TC   Werther International P 15TC Connected to anti-vibration table
Stereomicroscope   LEICA MZ9.5 For mouse eye dissection
Infrared image converters   B.E.Meyers ProwlerTM Bound to stereomicroscope
Differential amplifier
DP-311
  Warner Instruments DP-311  
Axon Digidata 1440A Digitizer   Molecular Devices 1440A  
Dual Channel 8-pole Filter   KROHN-HITE Corporation 3382  
Ceramic resistor   TE Connectivity CGS SBCHE618RJ For reheating the perfusion solution
Thermocouple T Physitemp Instruments IT-18  
Temperature monitor   Omega DPi32 Connected to thermocouple
LED 505 nm   TT Electronics/ Optek Technology Digi-key P/N 365-1185-ND To apply test flashes/bleaching light
Cautery pen   Bovie AA25 For marking the dorsal part of the mouse eyeball
pCLAMP 10 Electrophysiology Data Acquisition and Analysis Software   Molecular Devices    

References

  1. Yau, K. W., Lamb, T. D., Baylor, D. A. Light-induced fluctuations in membrane current of single toad rod outer segments. Nature. 269, 78-80 (1977).
  2. Nikonov, S. S., Kholodenko, R., Lem, J., Pugh, E. N. Physiological features of the S- and M-cone photoreceptors of wild-type mice from single-cell recordings. J. Gen. Physiol. 127, 359-374 (2006).
  3. Nymark, S., Heikkinen, H., Haldin, C., Donner, K., Koskelainen, A. Light responses and light adaptation in rat retinal rods at different temperatures. J. Physiol. 567, 923-938 (2005).
  4. Heikkinen, H., Nymark, S., Koskelainen, A. Mouse cone photoresponses obtained with electroretinogram from the isolated retina. Vision Res. 48, 264-272 (2008).
  5. Frank, R. N., Dowling, J. E. Rhodopsin photoproducts: effects on electroretinogram sensitivity in isolated perfused rat retina. Science. 161, 487-489 (1968).
  6. Wang, J. S., Kefalov, V. J. An alternative pathway mediates the mouse and human cone visual cycle. Curr. Biol. 19, 1665-1669 (2009).
  7. Kolesnikov, A. V., Tang, P. H., Parker, R. O., Crouch, R. K., Kefalov, V. J. The mammalian cone visual cycle promotes rapid M/L-cone pigment regeneration independently of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein. J. Neurosci. 31, (2011).
  8. Calvert, P. D. Phototransduction in transgenic mice after targeted deletion of the rod transducin alpha -subunit. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 13913-13918 (2000).
  9. Applebury, M. L. The murine cone photoreceptor: a single cone type expresses both S and M opsins with retinal spatial patterning. Neuron. 27, 513-523 (2000).
  10. Sillman, A. J., Ito, H., Tomita, T. Studies on the mass receptor potential of the isolated frog retina. I. General properties of the response. Vision Res. 9, 1435-1442 (1969).
  11. Vinberg, F., Koskelainen, A. Calcium sets the physiological value of the dominant time constant of saturated mouse rod photoresponse recovery. PLoS One. 5, e13025-e13025 (2010).
  12. Bolnick, D. A., Walter, A. E., Sillman, A. J. Barium suppresses slow PIII in perfused bullfrog retina. Vision Res. 19, 1117-1119 (1979).

Play Video

Cite This Article
Kolesnikov, A. V., Kefalov, V. J. Transretinal ERG Recordings from Mouse Retina: Rod and Cone Photoresponses. J. Vis. Exp. (61), e3424, doi:10.3791/3424 (2012).

View Video