Tuning Outer Segment Ca2+Homeostasis to Phototransduction in Rods and Cones

Feb 25, 2003Advances in experimental medicine and biology

Adjusting calcium balance in light-sensing cells to control visual processing in rods and cones

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Abstract

Cone photoreceptors exhibit a 35% ionic current contribution from Ca2+ ions in darkness, compared to 20% in rods.

  • Cone photoreceptors respond to light with faster kinetics and less sensitivity compared to rods.
  • Differences in Ca2+ homeostasis between cones and rods are primarily due to variations in ion channel behavior and Ca2+ clearance rates.
  • In cones, the rate of Ca2+ clearance through the exchanger occurs in the order of tens of milliseconds, while in rods it is in the order of hundreds of milliseconds to seconds.
  • The cGMP-sensitivity of cyclic GMP-gated ion channels in cones changes with Ca2+ concentrations expected in dark-adapted photoreceptors, unlike in rods.
  • While Ca2+ homeostasis differences are significant, they alone do not fully explain the distinct phototransduction responses observed between cones and rods.

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