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Responses of bipolar cells in the retina of the turtle
Author(s) -
Schwartz E. A.
Publication year - 1974
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1974.sp010431
Subject(s) - retina , depolarization , stimulus (psychology) , amplitude , hyperpolarization (physics) , biophysics , receptive field , optics , electrophysiology , physics , chemistry , neuroscience , biology , nuclear magnetic resonance , psychology , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , psychotherapist
The responses of bipolar cells in the retina of the turtle have been studied by intracellular recording. Two types of bipolar cell have been identified: one gave graded depolarizing and the other graded hyperpolarizing responses to small circles of light (100 μm diameter). The responses of both types of cell were similar in the following respects. 1. Both were extremely sensitive to dim light; the amplitude of response to a small circle of light increased with light intensity more steeply than the cone response. 2. Enlarging the diameter of a spot added an antagonistic effect which decreased response amplitude. This decrease in response amplitude was more apparent at dim than at bright light. Stimulating only distant areas of retina with an annulus produced a response of polarity opposite to that normally produced by a central spot. However, the responses of bipolar cells did not appear to be due to a simple summation of opposite polarity signals contributed from central and peripheral parts of their receptive fields. 3. When small spots or annuli of light were turned off there frequently occurred an overshooting OFF transient. The occurrence of OFF transients depended on the duration of the stimulus. Cones recorded under similar conditions produced an OFF depolarization. The size of cone OFF depolarizations increased with increasing duration of the preceding light; following approximately 3 sec of illumination their maximum amplitude was roughly 1/10 the amplitude of the preceding hyperpolarization. The size of OFF responses in both cone and bipolar cells was increased when horizontal cells were hyperpolarized by light. It is concluded that bipolar cells produce large responses for very small cone responses, and, as a consequence, a small depolarization in cones following illumination produces large OFF transients in bipolar cells. Furthermore, the responses of bipolar cells do not appear to represent a simple summation of opposite polarity input from receptor and horizontal cells.

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