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The eye « Take Home Message » The Eye • The wall of the eye has three layers: Outer layer of sclera and cornea middle layer of choroid, cornea, choroid ciliary body and iris and inner layer retina. • The Th eye is i movedd by b six i muscles l musculus l rectus t superior/inferior/medialis/lateralis and musculus obliquus s perior/inferior superior/inferior. • The blind spot corresponds to the area where the optic nerve enters the h eye. Optics Lens (a) Emmetropia (normal) (b) Myopia (nearsightedness) Correction (c) Hypertropia (farsightedness) Correction Biconcave (diverging) lens Biconvex (converging) lens Snellen Tafel zur Bestimmung des Visus Visus i = Distanz i des d Beobachters b h zur Tafel f l / Distanz bei der der kleinste lesbare Optotyp 5 visuelle Arcminuten gross ist. Normalwert: 1,0-1,6 (20 Jahre alt) 0,6-1,0 (60 Jahre alt) G if Greifvogel l ~ 10,0 10 0 « Take Home Message » Optics • The diffraction of light rays by the cornea and the lens create an image on the retina • If the optics of the eye is abnormal, then the image appears bl blurred: d hyper-metropia, h t i myopia i • Corrections with lenses of abnormalities of image formation • Visual acuity can be measured with the Snellen Chart. Retina Rod Rod Cone Outer nuclear layer Distal Bipolar cell Outer plexiform layer Vertical information flow Bipolar cell Horizontal cell Lateral information flow Amacrine cell Amacrine cell Proximal Inner nuclear layer Inner plexiform layer Ganglion cell layer Ganglion cell Light To optic nerve Plexus: Geflecht G « Take Home Message » Retina • The retina is a layer formed by different cells • Vertical transfer of information flows from photoreceptor cells (rods, cones) to bipolar cells and, then, ganglion cells emit axons leaving the eye, eye forming the optic nerve • Horizontal transfer of information is mediated by connections via i the th horizontal h i t l cells ll andd amacrine i cells ll Photoreceptors A Discs Cytoplasmic space Outer segment Plasma membrane Outer segment Cilium Mitochondria Inner segment g Inner g segment Nucleus Synaptic terminal Synaptic terminal Cone Rod B Free-floating discs Folding of outer cell membrane Folding of outer cell membrane Rod Connecting cilium Cone « Take Home Message » Photoreceptors • Transduction is the transformation of one form of energy into another form of energy (e (e.g. g light into bioelectrical energy) • In the eye, transduction takes place in the retina, and is performed f d bby th the photoreceptor h t t cells: ll cones andd rods d • In the outer segment of cones and rods, photo-pigments are modified difi d chemically h i ll by b the h presence off light: li h in i rods d the h photo-pigment is rhodopsin • Each rod has 1,000 disks, each with 10,000 rhodopsin molecules Photoreceptor distribution « Take Home Message » Photoreceptor Distribution • Cones are densest in the fovea (200,000 cones per sq.mm), Rods in the periphery • The central fovea covers about 5 degrees of visual angle, the th b held thumb h ld att arms length l th covers about b t 1-2 1 2 ddegrees. Dynamic range « Take Home Message » Dynamic range • The human visual system operates in a wide range of luminance value spanning 14 log units. units • Cones (5-6 Million total number) important for color vision, hi h acuity, high it llow sensitivity iti it (daytime (d ti vision), i i ) weakly kl converging system of connections • Rods d ( 120 Million illi totall number) b ) are important i for f gray scale l vision (in penumbra), low acuity, high sensitivity, highly converging i system off connections i • We distinguish scoptopic (rod only), photopic (cone only) and mesopic (both receptors) vision. Phototransduction cGMP Phosphodiesterase Outer segment Visual pigment G-Protein (Rhodopsin) (Transducin) membrane Cytoplasm Disc Disc interior GTP 5' GMP cGMP cGMP-gated channel Na+ Light Extracellular space Rod outer segment Na+ K+ Na+ K+ Membran ane potential Em Time Membrane pootential Photons Em Time when photon is absorbed Neurotransmitter release (Glutamate) « Take Home Message » Phototransduction • At rest (in darkness) darkness), cGMP maintains sodium channels open and entrance of sodium thus depolarizes the photoreceptor at a value of -40 mV mV, a stable resting potential corresponding to a so-called darkness current (entrance sodium, exit of potassium) • In presence of light, the photo-receptors are hyperpolarized • The h enzymatic i cascade d (including (i l di transducine) d i ) triggered i d by b light leads to a decrease of cGMP concentration in the photoreceptors h • As a result, the release of neurotransmitter, that was relatively high at rest (when the cell is depolarized), decreases ON and OFF retinal ganglion cells « Take Home Message » ON and OFF cells • The receptive p field of retinal gganglion g cells is circular,, comprising two antagonist zones: the center and the surround On-center center cells are activated when light is presented in the • On center and inhibited if the surround is illuminated • The reverse is true for off-center off center cells • Surround suppression is the main function of the horizontal cells. ll « Take Home Message » Adaptation • The visual dynamic y range g spans p 14 log g units. • The amount of light the pupil admits into the eye varies over a range of 16 to 1. Therefore the pupil makes only a very limited contribution to adaptation. • Retinal ganglion cells are sensitive to changes in illumination, not absolute levels of illumination. • The Th visual i l system t adapts d t to t constant t t illuminations, ill i ti andd if we do not move our eyes we become blind to constant ill i ti illumination. Retinal signalling Sign inverting synapse Receptor all hyperpolarize to light Horizontal Cell all hyperpolarize to light Bipolar Cell some hyperpolarize and some depolarize Amacrine Cell some give action potentials Ganglion Cells all give action potentials « Take Home Message » Retinal signaling • Depending p g on the receptors p on the bipolar p cell,, cone/rod signals can conserve or invert the photoreceptor signal (sign conservingg or sign g inverting g synapses). y p ) • All photoreceptors and horizontal cells hyperpolarize to light. • Bipolar cells can hyperhyper or depolarize to light. light • Some Amacrine and all Retinal ganglion cells emit action potentials. t ti l Color vision Light Light Light B G R red orange ll yellow S cone M cone L cone green violet nal response Retin blue 100 Blue Green cone cone Red cone 75 50 25 0 400 500 600 Wavelength 700 Monochromatic Di h Dichromatic ti C l bli Color blindness d 1. Incidence: males: 8/100 in whites, 5/100 in asians, 3/100 in africans females: frequency 10 times less 2. Types: protanopes: p p lack L cones deuteranopes: lack M cones tritanopes: lack S cones, very rare (1/10000) 3. Color tests: Ishihara plates Farnsworth-Munsell Hue Test Dynamic computer test Ishihara plate #2 Those with normal colour vision should read the number 8. Those with redgreen colour vision deficiencies should read the number b 33. T Total t l colour l blindness should not be able to read any numeral. « Take Home Message » Color Vision • Cones are responsible p for color vision • There are three main types of cones, each containing different photopigments, absorbing preferentially different wave lengths • Only 1 of 8 cones is blue blue. Red and green are equal. equal • Colour blindness occurs when particular cone types are absent. b t Visual System Fixationspunkt Linkes Gesichtsfeld Rechtes Gesichtsfeld Rechtes Auge Rechter optischer Nerv Linkes Auge R h optischer Rechter i h Trakt T k Linker optischer Nerv Linker optischer Trakt Optisches Chiasma « Take Home Message » Visual System • The information originating from the temporal hemi-retina remains on the same side • On the other hand, the information originating from the nasal h i i crosses midline hemi-retina idli (at ( the h optic i chiasma) hi ) • As a consequence, images in a given visual hemi-field are represented in the opposite cerebral hemisphere g cells,, information is sent to the • From the retinal gganglion visual thalamus (lateral geniculate nucleus = LGN) neurons • Axons of the optic nerve make synapse on LGN neurons, which send axons terminating in the primary visual cortex Visual Lesions Lesion linker optischer Nerv Lesion optisches Chiasma Lesion li k linker optischer Trakt « Take Home Message » Visual Lesions • A lesion at various locations along the visual pathways lead to loss of vision in distinct zones of the visual field (scotomas) LGN LGN LGN rechts 6 5 4 3 2 1 links 6 5 4 3 2 1 Linke nasale Retina Rechte temporale Retina Rechte nasale Retina Linke temporale Retina « Take Home Message » LGN • The LGN (lateral geniculate nucleus) is organized in six concentric layers • Each layer receives information from a single hemi-retina in the order CIICIC (contralateral (contralateral, ipsilateral) ipsilateral).