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1 S cone opsin appears last, and all opsins reach the reti
2 S cone signals influenced responses with the same sign a
3 S cone stimuli produced robust, direction-selective resp
4 S cone stimuli suppress glutamate release onto metabotro
5 S cones cover 90% of the retina by Fwk 19.
6 S cones were absent in Allocebus trichotis and Cheirogal
7 S-cone ERGs were abnormal in 50% of both groups.
8 S-cone ERGs were elicited using adaptation to 650-nm lig
9 S-cone terminals, identified by staining for S opsin, sh
10 S-cones constitute between 10% and 20% of all cones, the
11 S-cones in the cat retina do not form a regular geometri
12 e may be due in part to larger cells with an S cone phenotype in place of rods that failed to differe
13 nding zone at 200-microm eccentricity has an S-cone density averaging 25%, but, by 800 microm, this h
14 observed that Pias3 directly regulated M and S cone opsin expression by modulating the cone-enriched
16 le L and M cone b-wave activity in ESCS, and S cones may usurp both the space and neural pathways of
17 ontains three classes of cones, the L, M and S cones, which respond preferentially to long-, middle-
20 the relative contribution of melanopsin and S cones, with their overlapping, short-wavelength spectr
22 -fold reductions in the mRNAs for M-cone and S-cone opsin, respectively, whereas there was no signifi
23 ity, we studied the effects of luminance and S-cone adaptation on variability in S-cone increment thr
32 he vector, CNGB3 was detected in both M- and S-cones and resulted in increased levels of CNGA3, incre
33 , middle, and short wavelengths (L-, M-, and S-cones) was tested by physiologically and anatomically
34 and with stimuli that silenced the rods and S-cones, excluded an explanation based on intrusion from
38 es synaptic contact with both L/M as well as S-cone photoreceptors and only minimal contact with rod
39 eved and is of considerable interest because S-cones are the basis for the primordial mammalian chrom
40 one mosaic, the spatial relationship between S cones and the first cones to express L/M protein was a
41 low pathway that signals differences between S-cone responses and a sum of L- and M-cone responses; a
42 imetry, possibly due to an imbalance between S-cone adaptation and long (L)- and medium (M)-wavelengt
43 ntly with opsin in both S and L/M cones, but S cones express peripherin and opsin 1 to 3 weeks before
46 c inputs differs substantially: in S+ cells, S-cone signals were usually opposed by those of L- and M
49 ee area, but data are conflicting concerning S-cone numbers in the adult Macaca monkey fovea, and lit
50 -order neurons in the short-wavelength cone (S-cone, blue cone) pedicle and to learn more concerning
51 projections from short-wave-sensitive cones (S cones), and, consistent with this, we found that irrel
53 ile comparable losses are not seen in cones, S-cones comprise less than 10% of the cone population, s
56 of S cones onto both types could contribute S-cone input for cortical areas primary visual cortex an
57 This results in a delayed, sluggish cortical S-cone signal which is then integrated with L/M-opponent
58 etina have the potential to follow a default S-cone pathway and reveal an essential role for Tr beta
59 and the developmental mechanisms determining S-cone topography are markedly different from the time t
60 NR2E3 in cone precursors and differentiating S-cones of wild-type retina also generated rod-like cell
61 ive +S and -(L+M) receptive fields, and each S cone contributes different weights to different BY gan
67 one inherited retinal disorder, the enhanced S cone syndrome (ESCS), shows increased visual function,
71 pe of retinal degeneration known as enhanced S-cone syndrome, where patients have a 30-fold increase
73 e is a naturally occurring model of enhanced S-cone syndrome, Goldman-Favre syndrome and clumped pigm
74 e is the rd7/rd7 retina, a model of enhanced S-cone syndrome, Goldman-Favre syndrome, and clumped pig
76 the loss of functional Grk1 on the enhanced S-cone Nrl(-/-) background exacerbates age-related cone
78 one inherited retinal disease, the enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS), manifests a gain in function of
79 urse of homozygosity mapping of the enhanced S-cone syndrome gene, resulting from (1) unexpected alle
80 nduscopic findings in patients with enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS) may help clinicians in diagnosing
82 to evoke identical activation kinetics, ESCS S cones deactivated much more slowly than ESCS or normal
85 l cell-fate determination, leading to excess S cones at the expense of other photoreceptor subtypes.
86 ellular cells and cells receiving excitatory S-cone input but not in parvocellular cells or those rec
87 ity of 10%, with several areas lacking a few S cones that are not coincident with the area of highest
89 hought, that the potential image quality for S cones is comparable to that for L and M cones, and tha
94 been used to determine the pattern of foveal S cones in both the fetal and adult Macaca and human.
95 ll have a distribution and density of foveal S cones similar to adults, although the high-density rin
98 ck exclusively to invaginating contacts from S cones, and in the OFF stratum each cell collects appro
101 d M cones, whereas others receive input from S cones opposed by combined signals from L and M cones.
102 tratified cells, which receive ON input from S cones, fired synchronously with ON parasol and midget
107 ust bipolar cell dendrites, most likely from S-cone-specific bipolar cells, made synapses at ribbons
109 ys: one type receives input exclusively from S-cones, two types receive mixed S/M-cone input and the
111 f neurons that receive inhibitory input from S-cones ("S-") are quite unlike those of neurons that re
113 ded from neurons with substantial input from S-cones and found that, on several important dimensions,
124 totransduction proteins are not expressed in S cones until 1 to 3 weeks after the appearance of S ops
127 n retina and relatively higher expression in S-cone-like photoreceptors of Nrl-knockout retina compar
131 neration rd7 mutant mouse leads to increased S-cones accompanied by rod degeneration, whereas ectopic
138 ly, each S cone is presynaptic to four inner S-cone bipolar cells; in turn, each bipolar cell provide
139 n cell receives input from two or more inner S-cone bipolar cells and thereby collects signals from t
141 esponse to equiluminant stimuli that isolate S-cone activity, whereas the shortest are generated by s
142 by measuring neural responses to isoluminant S cone signals in extrastriate area MT of the macaque mo
143 may result from defective development, known S cone fragility, or abnormal maintenance of mature phot
144 detached cat retina, the density of labeled S-cone outer segments (OS) decreases rapidly as early as
145 entral zone about 100 microm wide that lacks S cones and is surrounded by a ring in which the S-cone
148 d to model the effects of log luminance, log S-cone adaptation, and second-site polarization (ratio o
149 input from L- and M-cones, lacked measurable S-cone input, showed high spike discharge rates, high co
155 nctions there have twice the responsivity of S cone contrast-response functions in normal controls.
156 ant lag between their expression and that of S cone opsin indicates that phototransduction proteins a
159 ndrome (ESCS), featuring an excess number of S cones, manifests as a progressive retinal degeneration
164 ral properties, and reflected integration of S-cone inputs via opponent, summing, and intermediate co
165 adaptation conditions with a higher level of S-cone adaptation and/or a more balanced ratio between l
166 s lower for conditions with higher levels of S-cone adaptation (F = 9.04, P = 0.013, for the trained
172 , lead to loss of rods, increased density of S-cones and supernormal S-cone-mediated vision in humans
176 retina thickness and enhanced generation of S-cones, and develop severe early onset retinal dystroph
178 These were identified as dendrites of the ON S-cone bipolar cell by immunostaining for the marker cho
179 nputs: an ON bipolar cell that contacts only S-cones and an OFF bipolar cell that contacts L- and M-c
180 patients, who rely on their vision from only S-cones and rods, suffer severely reduced visual acuity
181 rect a common precursor to a rod, M cone, or S cone outcome using Nrl(b2/b2) "knock-in" mice that exp
183 s of colored letters visible only to L, M or S cones in decreasing steps of cone contrast to determin
184 ence for multiple opsin types within rods or S cones, but immunohistochemistry and partial bleaching
185 toresponses initiated by either rhodopsin or S-cone opsin, and 3) exhibited similar light-activated t
190 t- wavelength sensitive cone photoreceptors (S-cones) did not show the adaptive response, and we foun
191 mounts demonstrated the preservation of PNA, S-cone, and rod opsin antibody labeling in the detachmen
192 ow that, in these two trichromatic primates, S-cone distribution and the developmental mechanisms det
198 fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), rhodopsin, S-cone opsin, and M/L-cone opsin were performed, as were
200 was tested in a Posner cueing task, the same S-cone stimuli had normal attentional effects, in that t
201 age under photopic achromatic and selective S-cone conditions in peripheral vision and whether any a
202 sible only to the short-wavelength-sensitive S cones interfere with shifts of visual attention but no
205 able analysis of short-wavelength-sensitive (S) cone responses has yet to be achieved and is of consi
206 ave sensitive (M/L) and shortwave sensitive (S) cones in most species, indicating at least dichromati
208 o stimulation of short wavelength-sensitive (S) cones and decreases to stimulation of middle waveleng
209 of the noise in short wavelength-sensitive (S) cones arose in a later stage of the transduction casc
210 kinetics of ESCS short-wavelength-sensitive (S) cones, when compared with normal L/M cone responses e
213 he assessment of short-wavelength-sensitive (S)-cone visual function, but has also been shown to have
214 peak sensitivities are at relatively short (S cones), medium (M cones), or long (L cones) wavelength
218 agree that the adult human fovea has a small S cone-free area, but data are conflicting concerning S-
223 n of primary visual cortex demonstrated that S cone signals were feedforward in nature and did not ar
225 S, L, and M cones in these regions and that S cones may feed into different neural pathways in the c
232 ion of short-wavelength light, suggests that S-cone contributions to this ganglion cell's coextensive
233 lated cone loss in either cone type and that S-cones are as regularly distributed in old as young pri
235 e release onto metabotropic receptors of the S cone bipolar cell dendrite, thereby opening cation cha
239 lls), its spatial density equals that of the S cone; thus it could support psychophysical discriminat
243 es were altered by background changes in the S cones, but not by background changes in the L and M co
252 Similar functions were generated for the S-cone pathway (isolated using Stiles' two-color thresho
254 ne-contacting telodendria projected from the S-cone pedicle itself, but a small number of neighboring
256 upports the hypothesis that, in mammals, the S-cone lineage was recruited via the Maf-family transcri
258 (1.87 +/- 0.08) tests but was reduced on the S-cone test (0.89 +/- 0.15) because of the fewer number
259 Colour discrimination studies show that the S-cone pathway is selectively affected by age and diseas
264 nd the relative sensitivity of MT neurons to S cone and luminance signals agree with functional magne
267 rrelevant peripheral stimuli visible only to S cones did not produce the saccadic distractor effect p
271 ipolar cell provides central elements to two S cones.) These bipolar cells are presynaptic to an equa
272 each S cone in macaque fovea, there are two S-cone ON bipolar cells and two blue-yellow (BY) ganglio
273 While these responses were unequivocal, S cone contrast sensitivity was, on average, 1.0-1.3 log
282 ith tiny spots in the central foveola, where S cones, and thus S opponent (S(o)) cell activity, are l
286 wfully modulated in contrast, and occur with S-cone stimuli invisible to the retinotectal route.
288 ], red-green [(L - M)-cone] and blue-yellow (S-cone) modulations at various temporal frequencies.
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