Rod photoreceptors control the ON vs OFF polarity of cone-signaling neurons

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

A fundamental feature of the visual system is its ability to detect image contrast. The contrast processing starts in the first synapse of the retina where parallel pathways are established to compute contrast to bright (ON pathway) and dark (OFF pathway) objects, separately transferred to morphologically identified ON and OFF cells throughout the visual system. Here, we found that response polarity in ON and OFF neurons is not fixed but rather switches dynamically to the opposite sign. The switch was not observed in rod-knockout mice, indicating that rods generate the polarity switch. We determined that neither horizontal cells nor rod-signaling pathways were responsible for the switch. Instead, we discovered that EAAT5 glutamate transporters located at photoreceptor terminals were required to produce the polarity switch. Our findings provide a new perspective on the adaptive properties of neural networks and their ability to encode contrast across the visual dynamic range.

Article activity feed