I. RECORDING PREPARATIONS
A.
Fly Mounting
1)
Choose an active, healthy fly. Anesthetize it by placing
it on a CO2 bed.
2)
When the
fly stops moving, secure it ventral side down to a glass
microscope slide, using modeling clay. Make sure that both
the head and upper thorax are accessible but immobilized.
Also make sure that you have not obstructed the spiracles along
the abdomen (in order to allow the fly to continue to breathe).
3) Mount the slide with
attached fly to the glass disk of the dissecting microscope
stage using more modeling clay. Center the eye of the fly
in the microscope field.
B. Recording Setup
1)
Pull both 1.0mm and 1.5mm electrodes. Pre-fill the tips by
standing them upside-down in a small beaker of fly saline for ~5
minutes. Back-fill one of each size electrode with fly saline
and mount it in its respective half-cell holder. The 1.0mm
microelectrode will serve as the live electrode and the
1.5mm microelectrode will serve as the reference
electrode.
2)
Carefully plug the live 1.0mm half-cell holder
into the Neuroprobe amplifier head stage on one
micromanipulator. Mount the rod of the 1.5mm reference
half-cell holder to the other micromanipulator. Clip one
end of the shielded silver reference cable to the
headstage shield, plug the other end into the 1.5mm headstage jack,
and ground the cable shield to the cage.
3) Position and advance the reference electrode to
impale the dorsal thorax of the fly. Position and advance
the live electrode so that it is just touching the corneal
surface of the eye.
4) Carefully apply a tiny droplet of saline
at the contact point between the live electrode and the retina.
5) Using the third micromanipulator, position the
fiber-optic light pipe so that it is pointed directly at the eye
and is as close as possible to the eye surface.
6)
Turn on the PowerLab box. Launch Scope from the "Fly ERG"
settings file. Verify the following initial connections
and settings:
Time Base: 5 seconds at maximum samples/second
CH A: Input from Neuroprobe x1; 50mV; no filters -
this monitors the ERG
CH B: Input from Powerlab + Output; 10 V; no
filters - this monitors the stimulus
PowerLab Stimulator: single pulse; 1000 msec delay;
2000msec duration;
4V amplitude
PowerLab + Output: Connected to both Input CH B
and light-pipe/diode cable
Note: It is particularly important that NEITHER channel be set
to AC Filter the recorded signal. Make SURE that the AC
box is NOT checked for either channel.
7) Set Scope
Sampling to Repetitive sweeps and hit START.
Verify that the Stimulator is, in fact producing a light flash
during each sweep, with the appropriate timing and amplitude (CH
B trace). DO NOT GO ABOVE 10 VOLTS STIMULUS
AMPLITUDE!
8) Temporarily set the
Stimulator Amplitude to 0V. Turn on the
Neuroprobe amplifier. START repetitive sweeps on
Scope. Zero the ERG trace (CH A) using the Neuroprobe DC
Balance knob. The trace may show a bit of baseline "drift"
between sweeps. If there is excessive noise or instability
in the trace, reposition your electrodes and/or consult the
instructor. You will need a fairly stable baseline before
you can continue with active recording.
9) STOP Scope
sweeps, reset Sampling to Single, and set
Stimulus Amplitude back to 4 volts.
10) You should now be ready for
light-flash stimulation and ERG recording.
II. RECORDING THE ERG
A. Basic ERG
1)
Scope should be set up to record both Channels A and B, with CH
B recording the light flash and CH A recording the ERG
response.
2) All ERG trials
should be conducted with the fly in the dark. To do this,
simply drop the drapes in the front of the cage prior to
initiating a stimulating/recording sweep.
3)
Trigger a single light flash at ~4V - 5V intensity.
DO NOT GO ABOVE 10 VOLTS
STIMULUS AMPLITUDE!
The ERG response should appear as a slow negative going wave,
with positive and negative transients at he onset and offset,
respectively. If you have a stable baseline, but one or both of
these components is not present in the ERG, that usually means
that the fly is dead or dying. Consult with the
instructor, and/or replace the fly as necessary. The
instructor can also show you how to digitally filter the trace
to remove very high-frequency fluctuations
4) Set
Scope Sampling to Multiple with 8-16 samples and a
30 second delay between samples. Hit START and
collect the set of traces.
5) The time-locked
average of these traces is an averaged evoked potential (AEP).
Scope calculates this automatically and displays it as the
(X bar = mean) trace.
Note: If you have a lot of baseline fluctuation, you may get some
traces which are non-representative - or in technical terms
"bad". These traces may not start from a flat zero line,
and/or may have slow voltage swings clearly unrelated to the
stimulus or response. It is OK to temporarily delete such
traces prior to producing your final AEP for printing.
Q1: Explain why the ERG retinal
slow potential on these traces. isdownwards (negative)
on these traces. Recall that you are recording extracellularly from near the corneal
surface of the
eye relative to a point in the body deep to the eye. How
does a
negative-going extracellular ERG correspond to a depolarization
of the
photoreceptors?
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