The effects of intraocular injections of ethylcholine mustard
aziridinium ion (AF64A), an irreversible inhibitor of choline
uptake, on the rabbit retina were assessed electrophysiologically,
pharmacologically, anatomically, and behaviorally. Survival
times from 1 day to 30 days were investigated. After 24 h, the
shortest time tested, the directional selectivity of On–Off
responding ganglion cells having the characteristic morphology
of On–Off directionally selective directionally selective
(DS) ganglion cells, as revealed by intracellular dye injection,
was significantly reduced, both by an apparent decrease of
preferred direction responses and an increase in responses to
null-direction movement. No toxin-mediated changes in the dendritic
trees of these cells were noted. Cells in AF64A-affected retinas
having the DS morphology did not respond significantly to GABAergic
or cholinergic agents such as picrotoxin and eserine, but did
respond to nicotine. Recordings from a small random sample of
other ganglion cell classes in the same retinas yielded no obvious
changes in response properties. The direct effects on starburst
(cholinergic) amacrine cells, which were identified by intraocular
injection of the fluorescent dye DAPI with the AF64A, were
investigated by intracellular injections of Lucifer yellow,
and by immunohistochemical staining with antibodies to choline
acetyltransferase (ChAT). Although starburst amacrine cell somas
survived the AF64A treatment for at least several days, the
dendrites could not be visualized by fluorescent dye injection
in affected retinas due to dye leakage of the injected fluorescent
dye from either the soma or proximal dendritic region. ChAT
staining revealed a sequence in which ChAT-positive cells were
undetectable first in the inner nuclear layer, and then in the
ganglion cell layer. Cholinergic amacrine cells in the central
retina were also affected before those in the periphery. The
electrophysiological changes observed typically preceded the
loss of ChAT activity. Behavioral tests for optokinetic nystagmus
responses also revealed a lack of such responses in the affected
eyes.