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Ancestral circuits for vertebrate color vision emerge at the first retinal synapse

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Authors/contributors
Title
Ancestral circuits for vertebrate color vision emerge at the first retinal synapse
Abstract
In vivo recordings of cone photoreceptor outputs in a tetrachromate reveal efficient ancestral strategy for color processing. , For color vision, retinal circuits separate information about intensity and wavelength. In vertebrates that use the full complement of four “ancestral” cone types, the nature and implementation of this computation remain poorly understood. Here, we establish the complete circuit architecture of outer retinal circuits underlying color processing in larval zebrafish. We find that the synaptic outputs of red and green cones efficiently rotate the encoding of natural daylight in a principal components analysis–like manner to yield primary achromatic and spectrally opponent axes, respectively. Blue cones are tuned to capture most remaining variance when opposed to green cones, while UV cone present a UV achromatic axis for prey capture. We note that fruitflies use essentially the same strategy. Therefore, rotating color space into primary achromatic and chromatic axes at the eye’s first synapse may thus be a fundamental principle of color vision when using more than two spectrally well-separated photoreceptor types.
Publication
Science Advances
Volume
7
Issue
42
Pages
eabj6815
Date
2021-10-15
Journal Abbr
Sci. Adv.
Language
en
ISSN
2375-2548
Accessed
8/7/23, 11:33 AM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Yoshimatsu, T., Bartel, P., Schröder, C., Janiak, F. K., St-Pierre, F., Berens, P., & Baden, T. (2021). Ancestral circuits for vertebrate color vision emerge at the first retinal synapse. Science Advances, 7(42), eabj6815. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abj6815
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