Melanopsin-expressing, Intrinsically Photosensitive Retinal Ganglion Cells (ipRGCs) by Dustin M. Graham and Kwoon Y. Wong

  1Dustin M. Graham and 2,3Kwoon Y. Wong 1Nature Publishing Group, New York, NY. 2Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences, Department of Molecular, Cellular & Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48105. 3Correspondence: kwoon@umich.edu   1. Introduction. For the greater part of 150 years it was assumed that the mammalian retina contained only …

The Role of Dopamine in Retinal Function By Elka Popova

The Role of Dopamine in Retinal Function Abstract Dopamine (DA) is the major catecholamine in all vertebrate retinas including man. All vertebrates have dopaminergic neurons identified as amacrine cells (ACs) and interplexiform cells (IPCs), with great variations among different species. DA neurons are comparatively rare with density about 10-100 per mm2, which means that they …

The Architecture of the Human Fovea By Helga Kolb, Ralph Nelson, Peter Ahnelt, Isabel Ortuño-Lizarán and Nicolas Cuenca

By Helga Kolb, Ralph Nelson, Peter Ahnelt, Isabel Ortuño-Lizarán and Nicolas Cuenca Abstract We summarize the development, structure, different neural types and neural circuitry in the human fovea. The foveal pit is devoid of rod photoreceptors and of secondary and tertiary neurons, allowing light to directly stimulate cones and give us maximal visual acuity. The …

Myriad Roles for Gap Junctions in Retinal Circuits by Stuart Trenholm and Gautam B. Awatramani

Stuart Trenholm1 and Gautam B. Awatramani2 1Assistant Professor, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada: stuart.trenholm@mcgill.ca 2Associate Professor, Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada: gautam@uvic.ca   Abstract Gap junctions are recognized in the electron microscope as dense starchy areas of opposed membrane between two cells. Small tracer molecules such as Neurobiotin pass through the …

What is glaucoma? by David Krizaj

What is glaucoma? David Križaj  Abstract Glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness in the world, can be challenging to diagnose because symptoms often appear at late stage of the disease, and challenging to treat because of the irreversible loss of retinal neurons. The term encompasses a heterogenous group of diseases that are characterized by altered …

The Science Behind Myopia by Brittany J. Carr and William K. Stell

The Science Behind Myopia Brittany J. Carr and William K. Stell INTRODUCTION Myopia (near-sightedness) is the most common refractive vision disorder in children. It is characterized by blurring of objects viewed at a distance, and is commonly the result of abnormal elongation of the eyeball – which causes the refractive image formed by the cornea …

Visual And Auditory Anomalies Associated With Albinism by Donnell J. Creel

  Donnell J. Creel   Introduction   One of the evolutionary characteristics of the mammalian visual system is the increase of binocular overlap of vision as eyes progress from being located on side of the head such as the guinea pig to the frontal position in Haplorrhine primates. Concomitantly as the proportion of temporal retina …

Part XIV: Evolution of Phototransduction, Vertebrate Photoreceptors and Retina by Trevor Lamb

1  Introduction “Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution” (1). Theodosius Dobzhansky’s insight is especially apposite in trying to comprehend the nature of our rod and cone photoreceptors, and the organization of our retina. Unless we understand how these cells and structures arose, through hundreds of millions of years of evolution, …

Development of Retinal Ganglion Cell Dendritic Structure and Synaptic Connections by Ning Tian

Ning Tian   Introduction The neuronal information of the visual scene that is processed by the retina is conducted to the brain by a set of separate spatio-temporal synaptic pathways. The morphological basis for the formation of these parallel synaptic pathways is the laminar-specific structure of the retina, in which specific subtypes of retinal neurons …

Color Vision by Peter Gouras

  Peter Gouras    1. Introduction. Color vision is an illusion created by the interactions of billions of neurons in our brain. There is no color in the external world; it is created by neural programs and projected onto the outer world we see. It is intimately linked to the perception of form where color …

Bipolar Cell Pathways in the Vertebrate Retina by Ralph Nelson and Victoria Connaughton

Ralph Nelson and Victoria Connaughton 1. Introduction. Retinal ganglion cells are typically only two synapses distant from retinal photoreceptors, yet ganglion cell responses are far more diverse than those of photoreceptors. The most direct pathway from photoreceptors to ganglion cells is through retinal bipolar cells. Thus, it is of great interest to understand how bipolar …

Phototransduction in Rods and Cones by Yingbin Fu

  Yingbin Fu   1. Introduction. Vertebrates rely on retinal rods and cones for the conventional, image-forming vision while non-image-forming vision is mediated by intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) (see Part II Chapter 7). Rods are specialized for low-light vision. They are extremely sensitive and can signal the absorption of single photons. Cones mediate …

Feedback Loops by Helga Kolb

  Helga Kolb   1. General characteristics. At every level of the retina there are reciprocal or feed-back loops in the circuitry so that certain neurons can interact laterally within the same layer, vertically from one layer to the other and indeed from the brain to the retina. The intra-layer feed-back loops are typically provided …

S-Cone Pathways by Helga Kolb

  Helga Kolb   1. General characteristics. Over the last few years, psychophysicists, electrophysiologists, geneticists and anatomists have concluded that there is something unique about the short wavelength system compared with the two longer wavelength systems in the visual system.       Fig. 1. Cone mosaic in the fovea where the S-wave or blue …