We studied how intrinsic membrane properties affect the gain and tempo
ral pattern of response in bipolar cells dissociated from retinae of t
iger salamanders. Currents specified by a pseudorandom binary sequence
, an m-sequence, superimposed on various means, were injected into the
cells. From the resultant membrane voltage response for each mean cur
rent, impulse responses were estimated. From each impulse response, tr
ansfer function, gain, and time constant were calculated. The bipolar
cells acted as quasilinear adaptive filters whose gain and response sp
eed are determined by the mean input current. Near resting potential,
gain, and time constant were maximum. Dynamics were slow and low-pass,
characterized by an approximately exponential impulse response. With
depolarization, gains were reduced sharply, responses were much faster
, and dynamics became band-pass, as indicated by an undershoot in the
impulse response. For any given mean current, the shape of the impulse
response did not depend on the amplitude of the m-sequence currents.
Thus, bipolar cells behaved in a quasilinear fashion. The adaptive beh
avior was eliminated by blocking a potassium current, which implicates
the role of a voltage-gated potassium conductance. Computer simulatio
ns on a model neuron including a delayed-rectifier reconstructed the o
bserved behavior, and provided insight into other, less readily observ
able, parameters. Thus, bipolar cells, even when isolated, possess mec
hanisms which regulate, with unsuspected elaborateness, the sensitivit
ies and dynamics of their responsiveness. Implications for adaptation
and neuronal processing are discussed.