Electrophysiologically, color-opponent retinal
bipolar cells respond with opposite polarities to stimulation
with different wavelengths of light. The origin of these
different polarities in the same bipolar cell has always
been a mystery. Here we show that an intracellularly recorded
and HRP-injected, red-ON, blue/green-OFF bipolar cell of
the turtle retina made invaginating (ribbon associated)
synapses exclusively with L-cones. Non-invaginating synapses
resembling wide-cleft basal junctions were made exclusively
with M-cones. Input from S-cones was not seen. From these
results we suggest sign-inverting transmission from L-cones
at invaginating synapses via metabotropic glutamate
receptors, and sign-conserving transmission from M-cones
at wide-cleft basal junctions via ionotropic receptors.
To explain the pronounced blue sensitivity of the bipolar
cell, computer simulations were performed using a sign-conserving
input from a yellow/blue chromaticity-type (H3) horizontal
cell. The response properties of the red-ON, blue/green-OFF
bipolar cell could be quantitatively reproduced by this
means. The simulation also explained the asymmetry in L-
and M-cone inputs to the bipolar cell as found in the ultrastructural
analysis and assigned a putative role to H3 horizontal
cells in color processing in the turtle retina.