The optic tectum is central for transforming incoming visual input into orienting behavior. Yet it is not well understood how this behavior is organized early in development and how it relates to the response properties of the developing visual system. We designed a novel behavioral assay to study the development of visually guided behavior in Xenopus laevis tadpoles. We found that, during early development, visual avoidance-an innate, tectally mediated behavior-is tuned to a specific stimulus size and is sensitive to changes in contrast. Using in vivo recordings we found that developmental changes in the spatial tuning of visual avoidance are mirrored by changes in tectal receptive field sharpness and the temporal properties of subthreshold visual responses, whereas contrast sensitivity is affected by the gain of the visual response. We also show that long- and short-term perturbations of visual response properties predictably alter behavioral output. We conclude that our assay for visual avoidance is a useful functional measure of the developmental state of the tectal circuitry. We use this assay to show that the developing visual system is tuned to facilitate behavioral output and that the system can be modulated by neural activity, allowing it to adapt to environmental changes it encounters during development.
Much of the information processing in the brain occurs at the level of local circuits; however, the mechanisms underlying their initial development are poorly understood. We sought to examine the early development and plasticity of local excitatory circuits in the optic tectum of Xenopus laevis tadpoles. We found that retinal input recruits persistent, recurrent intratectal synaptic excitation that becomes more temporally compact and less variable over development, thus increasing the temporal coherence and precision of tectal cell spiking. We also saw that patterned retinal input can sculpt recurrent activity according to a spike timing-dependent plasticity rule, and that impairing this plasticity during development results in abnormal refinement of the temporal characteristics of recurrent circuits. This plasticity is a previously unknown mechanism by which patterned retinal activity allows intratectal circuitry to self-organize, optimizing the temporal response properties of the tectal network, and provides a substrate for rapid modulation of tectal neuron receptive-field properties.
In the presynaptic terminal, the magnitude and location of Ca entry through voltage-gated Ca channels (VGCCs) regulate the efficacy of neurotransmitter release. However, how presynaptic active zone proteins control mammalian VGCC levels and organization is unclear. To address this, we deleted the CAST/ELKS protein family at the calyx of Held, a Ca2.1 channel-exclusive presynaptic terminal. We found that loss of CAST/ELKS reduces the Ca2.1 current density with concomitant reductions in Ca2.1 channel numbers and clusters. Surprisingly, deletion of CAST/ELKS increases release probability while decreasing the readily releasable pool, with no change in active zone ultrastructure. In addition, Ca channel coupling is unchanged, but spontaneous release rates are elevated. Thus, our data identify distinct roles for CAST/ELKS as positive regulators of Ca2.1 channel density and suggest that they regulate release probability through a post-priming step that controls synaptic vesicle fusogenicity.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.