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Anatomy of the Human Eye Retina • Despite its peripheral location is part of the CNS. • Converts light energy into action potentials that travel out the optic nerve into the brain. • Is layered, relatively simple for a CNS structure. • Surrounded on one side by pigmented epithelium. Contains melanin that helps reduce backscattering of light. Also plays a role in maintenance of photoreceptors. • 5 types of neurons in the retina: photoreceptors, bipolar cells, ganglion cells, horizontal cells and amacrine cells. • A direct 3 neuron chain is the basic unit of transmission. Photoreceptor (rods and cones) to bipolar cell to ganglion cell (axons form the Optic nerve) Structural Differences Between Rods and Cones rods and cones are distinguished by: • shape • type of photopigment they contain • distribution across the retina • pattern of synaptic connections • specialized for different aspects of vision Rod system-low spatial resolution but extremely sensitive to light Cone system- high spatial resolution but is relatively insensitive to light. Phototransduction • Photoreceptors do not exhibit action potentialslight causes a graded change in membrane potential that changes the rate at which neurotransmitter is released. – The NT is thought to be glutamate • Light absorption leads to hyperpolarization of the neuron. This leads to less release of neurotransmitter to post-synaptic cell. Cones and rods hyperpolarize in response to light What does light do? • In the dark, resting potential of the photoreceptor is - 40 mv. • Light shining onto outer segment leads to the hyperpolarization of the photoreceptor and reduction of neurotransmitter released. • In the dark the number of Ca++ channels open at the synaptic terminal is high, and rate of neurotransmitter release is high. • In the light number of open channels is reduced and rate of neurotransmitter release is reduced. cGMP gated Na+ channels are key in dark channel open due to cGMP binding. Na+ rushes in cell depolarized exposure to light causes cGMP breakdown, closing Na+ permeable channels, and hyperpolarization Light transduction • Light is detected by retinal Rhodopsin (from rods) is a combination of retinal, the light-absorbing molecule, and a large protein called opsin. The opsins are closely related in structure to the Gprotein-coupled receptors. Details of Phototransduction in Rod Photoreceptors http://webvision.med.utah.edu/photo1.html Rods vs. Cones • Rods produce a reliable response to a single photon – it takes over a 100 photons to produce a comparable response in a cone. • Cones adapt faster than rods – about 200ms for a cone; 800ms for a rod. • Rods synapse onto specific bipolar cells (rod bipolars) that synapse onto amacrine cells which contact both cone bipolars and ganglion cells. – Cones go to bipolar cell to RGC directly. • Rods exhibit convergence-many rods synapse onto (converge on) a single bipolar cell, many bipolars onto a single amacrine cell. – cones can be 1-1-1 Rods and cones are not distributed equally in the retina • Human - 91 million rods, 4.5 million cones. • In most places the density of rods exceeds that of cones. • Cones increase in density 200 fold in the fovea, become highly packed. Center of the fovea is rod free. • Gives high visual acuity, which decreases rapidly away from the fovea. • Reason why we constantly move our eyes toward what we want to look at. – And why it it best to see a dim object by looking away from it. Other cell layers are displaced in the fovea. Light hits cones with less interference. cones and color vision • 3 types of cone, each having different absorption spectra- called blue, green, and red opsin. • Most people can match any color by changing the intensities of these three colors (RGB). • 5-6% of males are color blind- due to mutations in red and green opsins. The pigment genes are Xlinked and near each other. Rods and Cones • Rods – 90 – 120 million – Peripheral vision – Located everywhere except fovea – Very sensitive to light – Used in low light situations – One type – Highly convergent – Black and White • Cones – 4-6 million – Central vision – High density in the macula and fovea – Less sensitive to light – Most normal lighting conditions – Three types (red, green, blue) – Nonconvergent – Color vision Retinal ganglion cells (RGC) • Record from an RGC and shine light onto different photoreceptors. Find: • Even in the dark RGCs are spontaneously active. • Receptive fields of RGCs are circular. Smaller in the center and bigger in the periphery • The receptive fields of RGCs overlap so that multiple RGCs see each point of space. • http://webvision.med.utah.edu/IPL.html Responses of On- and Off-Center Retinal Ganglion Cells to Stimulation of Different Regions of their Receptive Fields Summary- Retinal GanglionCells • For an on-center RGC, a point of light that just fills the center will give maximal stimulation (increased action potentials). • Light that crosses into surround will yield intermediate response depending on the relative amounts. • Both center and surround illuminated is similar to being in the dark (background levels). • Ganglion cells fire depending on contrast, not by absolute light intensity. Light in center -> on ganglion cells increase firing rate, off ganglion cells decrease firing rate glutamate mGluR6 glutamate AMPA Kainate NMDA AMPA Kainate Antagonistic Surrounds of Retinal Ganglion Cell Receptive Fields light hits surround cones - horizontal cell (surround) are hyperpolarized and release less GABA onto cone in center, depolarizes center cone. More glutamate released onto Bipolars from center cone. Off-center depolarized, on-center Hyperpolarized by glutamate from center cone. Off-center ganglion cell fires more On-center fires less. GABA glutamate mGluR6 AMPA Kainate glutamate AMPA Kainate NMDA Subtypes of RGCs • 2 Types:each has on and off center – M (Magnocellular) • 10% • Large receptive fields • Detection of movement – P (Parvocellular) • 90% • Center surround cells for color – Red-Green – Blue-Yellow • Detection of form and fine detail Summary • Light falls on photopigment, that is transformed to action potentials that ganglion cells convey to the brain. • Phototransduction occurs in rods and cones that have different properties that meet the conflicting demands of sensitivity and acuity. • RGCs have a center-surround arrangement of receptive fields that makes them good at contrast detection and relatively insensitive to background illumination. Central Visual Pathways: Retinal Targets • The retina (axons of RGCs) projects to multiple areas. Each area is specialized for different functions. – Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)- in the thalamusreceives input from retina and sends it to visual cortex. Most important visual projection for perception. – Pretectum-located at midbrain-thalamus boundary. Responsible for pupillary light reflex. – Superior colliculus-in midbrain, coordinates head and eye movements. – Suprachiasmatic nucleus- in hypothalamus-involved in day/night cycles. The human visual system: afferent projections Circuitry Responsible for the Pupillary Light Reflex Only one side is shown here remember the projections are symmetrical. The spatial relationships among the RGCs are maintained in their targets. • Organized in maps. • Images are inverted and left-right reversed as they are projected onto the retina. • The visual field can be divided into nasal, temporal, inferior (ventral) superior (dorsal). Fixation point is where the foveas align. • The left half of the visual world is represented in the right half of the brain and vice versa. (not left eye to right side of brain, but left visual field) Projection of the Visual Fields onto the Retinas • PN12041.JPG Images are inverted on the retina Projection of the Visual Fields onto the Retinas • PN12042.JPG Projection of the Binocular Field of View Relates to Crossing of Fibers in Optic Chiasm • PN12050.JPG http://thalamus.wustl.edu/course/cenvis.html The visual field At the optic chiasm, visual information from the two sides of the head cross. In animals with eyes on the sides of the head, the entire visual field for each side is sent to the opposite side (to the tectum). In forward-looking animals, the visual image is split An object on the right side of the visual field is seen by both left hemi-retinas. At the optic chiasm, the two left hemiretina projections go left, while the two right hemi-retinas go right. Fig 16-2 Visual field defects • Because the spatial relationships in the retina are maintained in the brain, a careful analysis of the visual fields of a patient can often indicate where brain damage is located. Visual Field Deficits Resulting from Damage Along the Primary Visual Pathway Black means blind LGN • 90% of retinal axons go to Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN). • LGN projects to visual cortex (striate cortex). • Contains 6 layers, specific to eye (ipsi vs contra) and with type of ganglion cell, magnocellular (gross shape and movement) or parvocellular (form and color.) • Layers align in order of visual fields. Projection to LGN Each LGN layer is eye-specific The projections from the retinal ganglion cells maintain the field of view as it was seen - this is called a retinotopic map. The LGN has 6 layers of cell bodies. Each LGN receives input from both eyes, but axons terminate in separate layers, so LGN nuclei are monocular Projection to cortex The visual field is projected in a retinotopic way. The right visual field projects to the left cortex; the left visual field to the right. The fovea, because of its high sensitivity and density of cones, is represented on one-fourth of striate cortex. Visuotopic Organization in the Right Occipital Lobe • PN12060.JPG Course of Optic Radiations to Striate Cortex Lower visual field (dorsal retina) Upper visual field- ventral retina Neurons in the primary visual cortex respond selectively to oriented edges • Hubel and Wiesel- measured responses of neurons in visual cortex. Found that they respond to bars or lines of specific orientations. • Two types of cells: – Simple: respond to stimulus only if matches orientation. Responds to bars or lines, not to spots. They also have surround inhibition. Receptive fields can be generated by having 3-4 LGN neurons innervate one simple cell. – Complex: bigger receptive fields, not strongly orientation selective, no clear on or off zones, detect movement. Neurons in the Primary Visual Cortex Respond Selectively to Oriented Edges Neurons in the Primary Visual Cortex Respond Selectively to Oriented Edges • PN12092.JPG Types of simple cell receptive fields Complex cells – some are directionally sensitive, other cells respond to length of stimulus Info from multiple LGN cells of the same orientation and field converge on a singe simple cell. Several simple cells converge on a complex cells red dots inhibitory synapses Mixing of Pathways from the Two Eyes First Occurs in the Striate Cortex: Layer IV projects to other layers and this is where the info from both eyes converges on the same cells • PN12100.JPG Columnar Organization of Ocular Dominance Aside form layer 4, cells in the superficial layers respond with varying degree to input from right and left eyes. Electrode shows in other layers the shift in ocular dominance is gradual. If the electrode is vertical, there is more strict ocular dominance. “hypercolumns” contain blobs which contain color sensitive circular surround receptive fields Columnar Organization of Orientation Selectivity in the Monkey Striate Cortex • PN12120.JPG Vertical electrode – all cells stimulated by same orientation. Across the layer, cells respond to different orientations. Note in layer 4, the dots represent lack of orientation specific cells in this layer Parallel processing in the visual system • Separate pathways for color (Parvocellular) and movement (Magnocellular). • M and P ganglion cells in retina. M cells bigger, larger receptive fields, faster conduction velocities, and respond transiently to visual stimulation. P cells smaller, respond in a sustained fashion. • M and P go to different layers in the LGN and project to different populations of cells in layer 4 of V1. Magno- and Parvocellular Streams Projection to cortex The striate cortex is a six-layered structure - layer 4 is the major input layer. LGN inputs Cortical cells Stellate cells in layers 4 receive the input and project it to layers 2/3, which then project to layers 5 and 6. 0utput of the cortex is via pyramidal cells in layers 2, 5 and 6. Extrastriate visual areas • There are many other areas of the brain that process visual information; each gets info from primary visual cortex (V1). • Specialized for different functions. • Middle temporal area (MT), respond to direction of a moving edge without regard to its color. • V4 responds to color of a stimulus without regard to form. • 10 different visual areas, each with a topographic map. • Damage in these areas can give weird experiences. Localization of Multiple Visual Areas in the Human Brain Using fMRI Organization of the Dorsal and Ventral Visual Pathways • PN12170.JPG Weird visual defects • Disruptions in V1 cause blindness, but some people can “guess” what an object is. Implies that other projections from eye to brain can somehow compensate. • Cerebral achromatopsia- do not see in color-only black and white. Legions in extrastriate cortex regions like V4 or in ventral stream. • Lesions in MT region cause defects in detecting motion. Hard to pour drinks accurately.