Summary
This study reveals that rod photoreceptors can signal fast temporal changes in light (up to 36 Hz) at upper mesopic levels via a Cx36 gap junction-independent retinal pathway, challenging the previously assumed sole route for rod-driven temporal vision. These findings have implications for lighting design at mesopic intensities (e.g., street lighting, dim indoor environments), where both rod and cone pathways are active and contribute differently to perception of flickering or dynamically changing light.
Key Findings
- At low mesopic light levels (400 photons/s/μm²), rod-driven temporal contrast sensitivity (TCS) was similar between control and cone-desensitized (GNAT2cpfl3) mice.
- At upper mesopic light levels (8000 photons/s/μm²), cone-desensitized mice showed reduced TCS at low temporal frequencies (<12 Hz) but maintained normal TCS at high temporal frequencies (12–36 Hz).
- Rod-driven high-frequency temporal contrast sensitivity developed gradually over more than 30 minutes of light adaptation.
- High-frequency rod signals were transmitted independently of Cx36 gap junctions, implicating alternative pathways such as direct rod-to-OFF cone bipolar cell synapses or glycinergic AII amacrine cell synapses.
Categories
The Science of Light: Investigates rod photoreceptor pathways and their contribution to temporal contrast sensitivity across mesopic light levels, advancing understanding of retinal circuitry relevant to lighting standards.
Author(s)
R Pasquale, Y Umino, E Solessio
Publication Year
2020
Number of Citations
11
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