| 1. | Ribbon synapses are found in retinal photoreceptor cells, retinal bipolar cells, and pinealocytes.
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| 2. | Rod bipolar cells do not synapse directly on to ganglion cells.
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| 3. | This signaling happens before bipolar cells form connections in the inner plexiform layer.
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| 4. | Bistratified cells receive their input from bipolar cells and amacrine cells.
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| 5. | The center-surround antagonism of bipolar cells is thought to be inherited from cones.
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| 6. | This inhibits the release of neurotransmitters from the bipolar cells to the ganglion cell.
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| 7. | The synaptic terminal forms a synapse with a neuron such as a bipolar cell.
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| 8. | It contains bipolar cells as well as multipolar cells.
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| 9. | This protein is assembled and secreted from photoreceptors and bipolar cells as a homo-oligomeric protein complex.
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| 10. | Further complexity arises from the various interconnections among bipolar cells, horizontal cells, and amacrine cells in the retina.
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