Literature DB >> 14650838

Morphology and physiology of primate M- and P-cells.

Luiz Carlos Silveira1, Cézar A Saito, Barry B Lee, Jan Kremers, Manoel da Silva Filho, Bjørg E Kilavik, Elizabeth S Yamada, V Hugh Perry.   

Abstract

Catarrhines and platyrrhines, the so-called Old- and New-World anthropoids, have different cone photopigments. Postreceptoral mechanisms must have co-evolved with the receptors to provide trichromatic color vision, and so it is important to compare postreceptoral processes in these two primate groups, both from anatomical and physiological perspectives. The morphology of ganglion cells has been studied in the retina of catarrhines such as the diurnal and trichromatic Macaca, as well as platyrrhines such as the diurnal, di- or trichromatic Cebus, and the nocturnal, monochromatic Aotus. Diurnal platyrrhines, both di- and trichromats, have ganglion cell classes very similar to those found in catarrhines: M (parasol), P (midget), small-field bistratified, and several classes of wide-field ganglion cells. In the fovea of all diurnal anthropoids, P-cell dendritic trees contact single midget bipolars, which contact single cones. The Aotus retina has far fewer cones than diurnal species, but M- and P-cells are similar to those in diurnal primates although of larger size. As in diurnal anthropoids, in the Aotus, the majority of midget bipolar cells, found in the central 2 mm of eccentricity, receive input from a single cone and the sizes of their axon terminals match the sizes of P-cell dendritic fields in the same region. The visual responses of retinal ganglion cells of these species have been studied using single-unit electrophysiological recordings. Recordings from retinal ganglion cells in Cebus and Aotus showed that they have very similar properties as those in the macaque, except that P-cells of mono- and dichromatic animals lack cone opponency. Whatever the original role of the M- and P-cells was, they are likely to have evolved prior to the divergence of catarrhines and platyrrhines. M- and P-cell systems thus appear to be strongly conserved in the various primate species. The reasons for this may lie in the roles of these systems for both achromatic and chromatic vision.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14650838     DOI: 10.1016/S0079-6123(03)14402-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Brain Res        ISSN: 0079-6123            Impact factor:   2.453


  17 in total

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