GABAergic amacrine cells balance biased chromatic information in the mouse retina

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Abstract

The retina extracts chromatic information present in an animal’s environment. In the mouse, the feed-forward, excitatory pathway through the retina is dominated by a chromatic gradient, with green and UV signals primarily processed in the dorsal and ventral retina, respectively. However, at the output of the retina, chromatic tuning is more mixed, suggesting that amacrine cells alter spectral tuning. We genetically targeted the population of 40+ GABAergic amacrine cell types and used two-photon calcium imaging to systematically survey chromatic responses in their dendritic processes. We found that amacrine cells show diverse chromatic responses in different spatial regions of their receptive fields and across the dorso-ventral axis of the retina. Compared to their excitatory inputs from bipolar cells, amacrine cells are less chromatically tuned and less likely to be colour-opponent. We identified 25 functional amacrine cell types that, in addition to their chromatic properties, exhibit distinctive achromatic receptive field properties. A combination of pharmacological interventions and a biologically-inspired deep learning model revealed how lateral inhibition and recurrent excitatory inputs shape chromatic properties of amacrine cells. Our data suggest that amacrine cells balance the strongly biased spectral tuning of excitation in the mouse retina and thereby support increased diversity in chromatic information of the retinal output.

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