Previous studies of rod photoreceptors in vivo have employed
a paired-flash electroretinographic (ERG) technique to determine rod
response properties. To test whether absence versus presence of
the ERG b-wave affects the photoreceptor response derived by the
paired-flash method, we examined paired-flash-derived responses obtained
from nob mice, a mutant strain with a defect in signal
transduction between photoreceptors and ON bipolar cells that causes a
lack of the b-wave. Normal littermates of the nob mice
served as controls. The normalized amplitude-intensity relation of the
derived response determined in nob mice at the near-peak time of
86 ms was similar to that determined for the controls. The full time
course of the derived rod response was obtained for test flash strengths
ranging from 0.11 to 17.38 scotopic cd s m−2 (sc cd s
m−2). Time-course data obtained from nob and
control mice exhibited significant but generally modest differences. With
saturating test flash strengths, half-recovery times for the derived
response of nobversus control mice differed by ∼60
ms or less about the combined (nob and control) average
respective values. Time course data also were obtained before
versus after intravitreal injection of
l-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate (APB) (which blocks transmission
from photoreceptors to depolarizing bipolar cells) and of cis
2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (PDA) (which blocks transmission to OFF
bipolar cells, and to horizontal, amacrine and ganglion cells). Neither
APB nor PDA substantially affected derived responses obtained from
nob or control mice. The results provide quantitative information
on the effect of b-wave removal on the paired-flash-derived
response in mouse. They argue against a substantial skewing effect of the
b-wave on the paired-flash-derived response obtained in normal
mice and are consistent with the notion that, to good approximation, this
derived response represents the isolated flash response of the
photoreceptors in both nob and normal mice.