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Dive into the research topics where Haruhisa Okawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Haruhisa Okawa.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

The spatial structure of a nonlinear receptive field

Gregory W. Schwartz; Haruhisa Okawa; Felice A. Dunn; Josh Morgan; Daniel Kerschensteiner; Rachel Wong; Fred Rieke

Understanding a sensory system implies the ability to predict responses to a variety of inputs from a common model. In the retina, this includes predicting how the integration of signals across visual space shapes the outputs of retinal ganglion cells. Existing models of this process generalize poorly to predict responses to new stimuli. This failure arises in part from properties of the ganglion cell response that are not well captured by standard receptive-field mapping techniques: nonlinear spatial integration and fine-scale heterogeneities in spatial sampling. Here we characterize a ganglion cells spatial receptive field using a mechanistic model based on measurements of the physiological properties and connectivity of only the primary excitatory circuitry of the retina. The resulting simplified circuit model successfully predicts ganglion-cell responses to a variety of spatial patterns and thus provides a direct correspondence between circuit connectivity and retinal output.


Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2014

Functional Architecture of the Retina: Development and Disease

Mrinalini Hoon; Haruhisa Okawa; Luca Della Santina; Rachel Wong

Structure and function are highly correlated in the vertebrate retina, a sensory tissue that is organized into cell layers with microcircuits working in parallel and together to encode visual information. All vertebrate retinas share a fundamental plan, comprising five major neuronal cell classes with cell body distributions and connectivity arranged in stereotypic patterns. Conserved features in retinal design have enabled detailed analysis and comparisons of structure, connectivity and function across species. Each species, however, can adopt structural and/or functional retinal specializations, implementing variations to the basic design in order to satisfy unique requirements in visual function. Recent advances in molecular tools, imaging and electrophysiological approaches have greatly facilitated identification of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that establish the fundamental organization of the retina and the specializations of its microcircuits during development. Here, we review advances in our understanding of how these mechanisms act to shape structure and function at the single cell level, to coordinate the assembly of cell populations, and to define their specific circuitry. We also highlight how structure is rearranged and function is disrupted in disease, and discuss current approaches to re-establish the intricate functional architecture of the retina.


Nature Methods | 2016

Expansion microscopy with conventional antibodies and fluorescent proteins

Tyler J. Chozinski; Aaron R. Halpern; Haruhisa Okawa; Hyeon Jin Kim; Grant J. Tremel; Rachel Wong; Joshua C. Vaughan

Expansion microscopy is a technique in which fluorophores on fixed specimens are linked to a swellable polymer that is physically expanded to enable super-resolution microscopy with ordinary microscopes. We have developed and characterized new methods for linking fluorophores to the polymer that now enable expansion microscopy with conventional fluorescently labeled antibodies and fluorescent proteins. Our methods simplify the procedure and expand the palette of compatible labels, allowing rapid dissemination of the technique.


Neuron | 2014

Illuminating the multifaceted roles of neurotransmission in shaping neuronal circuitry

Haruhisa Okawa; Mrinalini Hoon; Takeshi Yoshimatsu; Luca Della Santina; Rachel Wong

Across the nervous system, neurons form highly stereotypic patterns of synaptic connections that are designed to serve specific functions. Mature wiring patterns are often attained upon the refinement of early, less precise connectivity. Much work has led to the prevailing view that many developing circuits are sculpted by activity-dependent competition among converging afferents, which results in the elimination of unwanted synapses and the maintenance and strengthening of desired connections. Studies of the vertebrate retina, however, have recently revealed that activity can play a role in shaping developing circuits without engaging competition among converging inputs that differ in their activity levels. Such neurotransmission-mediated processes can produce stereotypic wiring patterns by promoting selective synapse formation rather than elimination. We discuss how the influence of transmission may also be limited by circuit design and further highlight the importance of transmission beyond development in maintaining wiring specificity and synaptic organization of neural circuits.


Neuron | 2014

Interplay of Cell-Autonomous and Nonautonomous Mechanisms Tailors Synaptic Connectivity of Converging Axons In Vivo

Haruhisa Okawa; Luca Della Santina; Gregory W. Schwartz; Fred Rieke; Rachel Wong

Neurons receive input from diverse afferents but form stereotypic connections with each axon type to execute their precise functions. Developmental mechanisms that specify the connectivity of individual axons across populations of converging afferents are not well-understood. Here, we untangled the contributions of activity-dependent and independent interactions that regulate the connectivity of afferents providing major and minor input onto a neuron. Individual transmission-deficient retinal bipolar cells (BCs) reduced synapses with retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), but active BCs of the same type sharing the dendrite surprisingly did not compensate for this loss. Genetic ablation of some BC neighbors resulted in increased synaptogenesis by the remaining axons in a transmission-independent manner. Presence, but not transmission, of the major BC input also dissuades wiring with the minor input and with synaptically compatible but functionally mismatched afferents. Cell-autonomous, activity-dependent and nonautonomous, activity-independent mechanisms thus together tailor connectivity of individual axons among converging inner retinal afferents.


Cell | 2017

Cellular and Circuit Mechanisms Shaping the Perceptual Properties of the Primate Fovea

Raunak Sinha; Mrinalini Hoon; Jacob Baudin; Haruhisa Okawa; Rachel Wong; Fred Rieke

The fovea is a specialized region of the retina that dominates the visual perception of primates by providing high chromatic and spatial acuity. While the foveal and peripheral retina share a similar core circuit architecture, they exhibit profound functional differences whose mechanisms are unknown. Using intracellular recordings and structure-function analyses, we examined the cellular and synaptic underpinnings of the primate fovea. Compared to peripheral vision, the fovea displays decreased sensitivity to rapid variations in light inputs; this difference is reflected in the responses of ganglion cells, the output cells of the retina. Surprisingly, and unlike in the periphery, synaptic inhibition minimally shaped the responses of foveal midget ganglion cells. This difference in inhibition cannot however, explain the differences in the temporal sensitivity of foveal and peripheral midget ganglion cells. Instead, foveal cone photoreceptors themselves exhibited slower light responses than peripheral cones, unexpectedly linking cone signals to perceptual sensitivity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Neurotransmission plays contrasting roles in the maturation of inhibitory synapses on axons and dendrites of retinal bipolar cells

Mrinalini Hoon; Raunak Sinha; Haruhisa Okawa; Sachihiro C. Suzuki; Arlene A. Hirano; Nicholas C. Brecha; Fred Rieke; Rachel Wong

Significance Neuronal output is modulated by inhibition onto axons and dendrites by diverse inhibitory synapses comprising distinct receptor subunits. Factors that regulate the in vivo maturation of these synapses across cell-compartments are not well understood. We discovered that axonal GABAA receptors are down-regulated whereas dendritic GABAA receptors are up-regulated on retinal bipolar cells in the absence of vesicular GABA release. Deleting the γ2 subunit of GABAA receptors specifically in bipolar cells only alters axonal GABAA receptor expression, suggesting that axonal and dendritic GABAA receptors have distinct subunit compositions that are regulated independently. Moreover, vesicular GABA release from presynaptic amacrine but not horizontal interneurons is important. Thus, regulation of inhibitory synapse maturation across the bipolar cell is input-type, receptor-type, and cell-compartment-type specific. Neuronal output is modulated by inhibition onto both dendrites and axons. It is unknown whether inhibitory synapses at these two cellular compartments of an individual neuron are regulated coordinately or separately during in vivo development. Because neurotransmission influences synapse maturation and circuit development, we determined how loss of inhibition affects the expression of diverse types of inhibitory receptors on the axon and dendrites of mouse retinal bipolar cells. We found that axonal GABA but not glycine receptor expression depends on neurotransmission. Importantly, axonal and dendritic GABAA receptors comprise distinct subunit compositions that are regulated differentially by GABA release: Axonal GABAA receptors are down-regulated but dendritic receptors are up-regulated in the absence of inhibition. The homeostatic increase in GABAA receptors on bipolar cell dendrites is pathway-specific: Cone but not rod bipolar cell dendrites maintain an up-regulation of receptors in the transmission deficient mutants. Furthermore, the bipolar cell GABAA receptor alterations are a consequence of impaired vesicular GABA release from amacrine but not horizontal interneurons. Thus, inhibitory neurotransmission regulates in vivo postsynaptic maturation of inhibitory synapses with contrasting modes of action specific to synapse type and location.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2017

Using Fluorescent Markers to Estimate Synaptic Connectivity In Situ.

Mrinalini Hoon; Raunak Sinha; Haruhisa Okawa

Labeling fixed brain tissue with fluorescent synaptic and cellular markers can help assess circuit connectivity. Despite the diffraction-limited resolution of light microscopy there are several approaches to identify synaptic contacts onto a cell-of-interest. Understanding which image quantification methods can be applied to estimate cellular and synaptic connectivity at the light microscope level is beneficial to answer a range of questions, from mapping appositions between cellular structures or synaptic proteins to assessing synaptic contact density onto a cell-of-interest. This chapter provides the reader with details of the image analysis methods that can be applied to quantify in situ connectivity patterns at the level of cellular contacts and synaptic appositions.


Current Biology | 2016

Glutamatergic Monopolar Interneurons Provide a Novel Pathway of Excitation in the Mouse Retina

Luca Della Santina; Sidney P. Kuo; Takeshi Yoshimatsu; Haruhisa Okawa; Sachihiro C. Suzuki; Mrinalini Hoon; Kotaro Tsuboyama; Fred Rieke; Rachel Wong


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Dynamics of ribbon synapse assembly in the developing inner retina

Haruhisa Okawa; Benjamin Odermatt; Haining Zhong; Leon Lagnado; Frank Schmitz; Rachel Wong; Ulf Matti

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Rachel Wong

University of Washington

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Fred Rieke

University of Washington

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Mrinalini Hoon

University of Washington

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Raunak Sinha

University of Washington

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Daniel Kerschensteiner

Washington University in St. Louis

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