Cone photoreceptors are specialized retinal neurons responsible for photopic (bright light) vision, color discrimination, and high-acuity visual perception.[@mustafi2022][@curcio2021] As one of the two primary photoreceptor types in the mammalian retina (alongside rod photoreceptors), cones mediate daylight vision and enable detailed visual tasks such as reading, face recognition, and color perception.[@mustafi2022][@wassle2021]
Cone photoreceptors are specialized retinal neurons responsible for photopic (bright light) vision, color discrimination, and high-acuity visual perception.[@mustafi2022][@curcio2021] As one of the two primary photoreceptor types in the mammalian retina (alongside rod photoreceptors), cones mediate daylight vision and enable detailed visual tasks such as reading, face recognition, and color perception.[@mustafi2022][@wassle2021]
Cone photoreceptor degeneration is a hallmark of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and other retinal disorders, making them critical targets for therapeutic development and disease research.[@curcio2021][@lim2022]
Inner segment: Contains ellipsoid (mitochondria-rich) and myoid (protein synthesis) regions[@mustafi2022]
Cell body: Houses the nucleus and cytoplasmic organelles[@mustafi2022]
Synaptic terminal: Ribbon synapse connecting to cone bipolar cells and horizontal cells[@wassle2021]
Cone Subtypes
Mammals possess three cone subtypes distinguished by their opsin photopigments:[@mustafi2022][@curcio2021]
The distribution of these cone types varies across the retina, with L- and M-cones dominating the fovea while S-cones are more prevalent in the peripheral retina.[@mustafi2022][@curcio2021]
Visual Signal Transduction
Phototransduction Cascade
Cone phototransduction follows the same fundamental cascade as rod phototransduction but with key differences in kinetics and sensitivity:[@mustafi2022][@wassle2021]
Photon absorption: 11-cis-retinal in cone opsin isomerizes to all-trans-retinal[@mustafi2022]
Cone-rod dystrophy (CORD): Primary cone degeneration with secondary rod loss[@curcio2021]
Achromatopsia: Complete color blindness from cone opsin mutations[@curcio2021]
Stationary night blindness: Some forms affect cone function[@cideciyan2023]
Stargardt Disease
Stargardt disease (STGD1), the most common inherited macular dystrophy, involves ABCA4 mutations leading to lipofuscin accumulation and cone photoreceptor death.[@curcio2021][@cideciyan2023]