Author:
TWIG G.,LEVY H.,PERLMAN I.
Abstract
Horizontal cells are second-order retinal neurons that play
a key role in spatial information processing. In some cold-blooded
vertebrates such as turtles, a subtype of these cells, the
chromaticity horizontal cells exhibit color-opponent responses
and therefore are considered to be important also for color
information processing. To reveal spatial and color interactions,
the receptive-field properties of Red/Green and Yellow/Blue
chromaticity horizontal cells in the retina of the turtle
Mauremys caspica were studied by intracellular recordings
from the everted eyecup preparation. We found that the polarity
of the photoresponses depended not only upon the wavelength
and intensity of the stimulus, but also upon its spatial
configuration. Thus, a hyperpolarizing photoresponse that was
elicited by full-field stimulation with bright light of wavelength
close to the “neutral” one was reversed in polarity
to a pure depolarizing one when a small spot or a thin annular
pattern were used for stimulation. This finding could not be
explained either by different balances between depolarizing
and hyperpolarizing inputs to different cells or by stray light
that effectively reduced the light intensity in the center of
the small spot. Rather, it was found that the depolarizing and
hyperpolarizing components were characterized by different
receptive-field size and that these differences could account
for the dependency of response polarity upon the spatial pattern
of the stimulus. These findings indicate that color information
processing in turtle C-type horizontal cells is a complex process
that depends upon the wavelength and intensity of the light
stimulus as well as upon its spatial properties.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
6 articles.
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