OK, hopefully someone can help me out. I'm trying to work through in my
head the logic of phototransduction. I know what happens within the rods
and cones, what I'm confused about is what happens at the bipolar level.
I'm a little rusty on it and I seem to be getting different things from
different texts. For example. Blake and Secular say that there are two
types of bipolar cells--one type depolarizes in response to an increase
in glutamate (i.e. in the dark) and one kind depolarizes to a decrease
in glutamate (i.e. in the light). So the response of bipolars is to
depolarize--the same result from different cells under different
conditions. But Kandel, Schwartz, and Jessel indicate that in one
condition glutamate will depolarize bipolars and in another it will
hyperpolarize them, so different responses are evoked by different
conditions. I've read so darned many texts on the subject that I am
getting really confused, and if I'm confused, I can only imagine how my
students will feel. What is it that I'm missing here? Ultimately the
message has to become an action potential in the RG cell, I'm just not
sure exactly when. I feel like telling them that it's just magic.
Thanks,
Carol




Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Psychology
St. Ambrose University
Davenport, Iowa  52803

phone: 563-333-6482
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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