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Publication : Adaptation to background light enables contrast coding at rod bipolar cell synapses.

First Author  Ke JB Year  2014
Journal  Neuron Volume  81
Issue  2 Pages  388-401
PubMed ID  24373883 Mgi Jnum  J:250020
Mgi Id  MGI:6100292 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2013.10.054
Citation  Ke JB, et al. (2014) Adaptation to background light enables contrast coding at rod bipolar cell synapses. Neuron 81(2):388-401
abstractText  Rod photoreceptors contribute to vision over an approximately 6-log-unit range of light intensities. The wide dynamic range of rod vision is thought to depend upon light intensity-dependent switching between two parallel pathways linking rods to ganglion cells: a rod --> rod bipolar (RB) cell pathway that operates at dim backgrounds and a rod --> cone --> cone bipolar cell pathway that operates at brighter backgrounds. We evaluated this conventional model of rod vision by recording rod-mediated light responses from ganglion and AII amacrine cells and by recording RB-mediated synaptic currents from AII amacrine cells in mouse retina. Contrary to the conventional model, we found that the RB pathway functioned at backgrounds sufficient to activate the rod --> cone pathway. As background light intensity increased, the RB's role changed from encoding the absorption of single photons to encoding contrast modulations around mean luminance. This transition is explained by the intrinsic dynamics of transmission from RB synapses.
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