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1 suggesting that their eyes undergo effective light adaptation.
2 .1-10 microM Ca(2+)) and accurately mimicked light adaptation.
3 d changes in photoresponse properties during light adaptation.
4 ly through dopamine receptor pathways during light adaptation.
5 , coupling is regulated during the course of light adaptation.
6 e speeding of incremental dim flashes during light adaptation.
7 ect interaction with PIs and is required for light adaptation.
8 s in photoreceptor synaptic transmission and light adaptation.
9 pted retina were consistent with its role in light adaptation.
10 on constant of transduction was unaltered by light adaptation.
11 n's first and most fundamental mechanism for light adaptation.
12 )-mediated modulation of transduction during light adaptation.
13 esting the importance of the modification in light adaptation.
14 desensitizes rods by a process equivalent to light adaptation.
15 round organization of the visual system with light adaptation.
16 y connecting output and input, and regulates light adaptation.
17 g windmill pattern, similar to the effect of light adaptation.
18 is involved in numerous functions related to light adaptation.
19 ular correlate of classical conditioning and light adaptation.
20 the principal extruder of Ca(2+) ions during light adaptation.
21 nsights into the nature of rod photoreceptor light adaptation.
22 ion of photoreceptor guanylyl cyclase during light adaptation.
23 activation does not appear to play a role in light adaptation.
24 ination, it does not participate directly in light adaptation.
25 e detection limit to higher frequencies upon light adaptation.
26 becomes significantly more protonated during light adaptation.
27 n horizontal cell electrical synapses during light adaptation.
28 he changed titration behavior of Y185F after light adaptation.
29 ols photoresponse sensitivity, kinetics, and light adaptation.
30 compensate for nonlinear properties such as light adaptation.
31 which was shifted to higher frequencies upon light adaptation.
32 easurements of rhodopsins to investigate dim-light adaptation.
33 synaptic inputs, and are critical to retinal light adaptation.
34 inergic system and in turn influence retinal light adaptation.
35 e of a newly described form of photoreceptor light adaptation.
36 otoreceptors to tune gain, inactivation, and light adaptation.
37 ng image contrast, color discrimination, and light adaptation.
38 bed cp26 gene that we found had no effect on light adaptation.
39 tion in the photoreceptors in either dark or light adaptation.
40 so used by the visual system as a signal for light adaptation.
41 annot be regarded as a general mechanism for light adaptation.
42 storage compartment, resulting in long term light adaptation.
43 s, respectively) that depended on background light adaptation.
44 und illumination and severely impaired their light adaptation.
45 l properties of cones in darkness and during light adaptation.
46 ation of saturated responses shut off during light adaptation.
47 f a spectral shift with increasing levels of light adaptation.
48 s when arrestin1 translocated in response to light adaptation.
49 rs, an increase of cytoplasmic Ca(2+) mimics light adaptation.
50 insights into the classic problem of retinal light adaptation.
51 rucial for late proton conductance following light adaptation.
52 endent protein kinase II (CaMKII) to mediate light adaptation.
53 amically regulated by a circadian rhythm and light adaptation.
54 cone bipolar cells was unaltered by dark or light adaptation.
55 ds, thus making an important contribution to light adaptation.
56 sed to monitor cone adaptation after intense light adaptation.
57 RetGC activation in the conditions mimicking light adaptation.
58 thereby may serve as a powerful mechanism of light adaptation.
59 cells were indistinguishable after dark and light adaptation.
60 cycle accumulates 11-cis-retinyl esters upon light adaptation.
61 naptic terminals, regardless of the state of light adaptation.
62 mposed flashes grew in amplitude, indicating light adaptation.
63 t response and modulating sensitivity during light-adaptation.
66 rst synapse of vision.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Light adaptation adjusts the sensitivity of vision as am
68 hought to be a major locus for mechanisms of light adaptation and contrast enhancement in the retina.
70 esponses were greatly suppressed during both light adaptation and early stages of dark adaptation.
71 by eye-protein kinase C (PKC) that promotes light adaptation and fast deactivation, most likely via
72 ession of CaMKII in transgenic flies affects light adaptation and increases prolonged depolarizing af
73 roplast is activated by a shift to pH 8 upon light adaptation and is inhibited by a shift to pH 7 upo
75 kinase (RK) is a conserved component of the light adaptation and recovery pathways shared among rod
79 channel phosphorylation may be important for light adaptation and the regulation of phototransduction
80 hototransduction, reduces sensitivity during light adaptation, and suppresses bleached rhodopsin acti
81 of its population dynamics, growth rate, and light adaptation, and the size and macromolecular and el
82 behavioral and physiological descriptions of light adaptation are reviewed, and recent attempts to mo
83 ceptor outer segments were shortened by 36%, light adaptation as measured by transducin translocation
84 ate that elimination of M1 ipRGCs attenuates light adaptation, as evidenced by an impaired electroret
86 receptive field structure changes less with light adaptation at higher input-to-output cell ratios,
88 ion, implicating a nonlinear process--namely light adaptation--at the level of single cone photorecep
89 d by 1-1.5 log units, after which additional light adaptation brought about an uncoupling of cells.
90 +) influx via these channels is required for light adaptation, but although several molecular targets
91 nce image-forming visual function, including light adaptation, but the mechanisms involved are unclea
92 suction electrodes, in the dark, and during light adaptation by backgrounds or by bleaching visual p
93 te that bipolar cell sodium channels mediate light adaptation by controlling retinal signaling gain.
94 pport a dopaminergic role in post-receptoral light adaptation by decreasing HC receptive field diamet
96 on of axon collateral-bearing ipRGCs impairs light adaptation by limiting dopamine-dependent facilita
97 ract decreases in retinal sensitivity during light adaptation by preventing the loss of visual inform
99 that both DA and NO could be involved in the light-adaptation changes induced by either pattern of in
100 and intensity of light exposures, mediating light adaptation, circadian entrainment, pupillary refle
102 sulted in deficits in retinal patterning and light adaptation, consistent with its known roles in mam
107 is photoprotection mechanism, along with low light adaptation, enables this alga to thrive throughout
108 ptor cell deactivation, desensitization, and light adaptation, failed to suppress rdgB degeneration u
110 t has been associated with the regulation of light adaptation, gain control, and gap junctional coupl
111 totransduction processes, has elucidated how light adaptation happens dynamically through stochastic
112 he understanding of vertebrate photoreceptor light adaptation has come from the discovery that as man
120 packing principles under confinement enable light adaptation in plants, offering insights into organ
127 changes in the outer retina during dark and light adaptation in unaffected and Best disease subjects
130 these cells exhibit all of the hallmarks of light adaptation, including response range compression,
131 cker photometry under conditions of dark- or light-adaptation, indicated a peak sensitivity at around
135 ove rod threshold, after which, with further light adaptation, it stabilized at levels close to those
138 a prominent Ca(2+)-independent component of light adaptation not typically seen in rods and cones or
143 proposed that phosducin plays a role in the light adaptation of G protein-mediated visual signaling.
148 order to study the relative contribution to light adaptation of the various actions of Ca2+ in rod p
149 ic details, a kinetic model evinces that low-light adaptations of the bacterium emerge as a spontaneo
153 eptor kinase 1 (GRK1), is a component of the light adaptation pathway expressed in rods and cones.
154 st, ERG flicker analysis after the 15-minute light adaptation period demonstrated no loss in amplitud
155 ed ion channel, important properties such as light adaptation, photocurrent inactivation, and alterat
156 regulation of the visual response affecting light adaptation, possibly by catalyzing phosphorylation
157 stent with a role for Pd in Ca(2+)-dependent light adaptation processes in photoreceptor cells and al
158 argue for a novel mechanism of photoreceptor light adaptation produced by modulation of GAP-dependent
159 act high-acuity vision by driving aspects of light adaptation ranging from pupil constriction to chan
164 mutant animals, either in darkness or during light adaptation, ruling out a role for EML1 in modulati
168 k of NCKX1 did not compromise rod background light adaptation, suggesting additional Ca(2+)-extruding
169 sphorylated and decreased more slowly during light adaptation (t((1/2)) approximately 9 min) to less
170 These data appear to exclude models for light adaptation that postulate high levels of phosphory
171 minutes and continuing through 15 minutes of light adaptation, the cone b-wave amplitudes of WT and A
172 ritical for amplification, inactivation, and light adaptation, the fractional contribution of Ca(2+)
173 nce that they are dynamically gated for dark/light adaptation, the full impact that rod-cone GJs can
178 to irradiance responses dissipates following light adaptation to the extent that these receptors make
182 83/96/182 cluster on retinal maintenance and light adaptation, we generated a sponge transgenic mouse
183 ssential for cone photoreceptor survival and light adaptation, whereas either Arr1 or Arr4 is necessa
184 sponses were separated from rod responses by light adaptation, whereas rod sensitivity was assessed b
185 .51 mum) 10 to 20 minutes after the start of light adaptation, while Best disease subjects exhibited
186 s in the tiger salamander were used to study light adaptation with positive and negative contrast sti