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The
Key to Vision?
(HealthScoutNews) -- A University of Florida study offers the
first photographic evidence that a protein crucial to vision moves
inside eye cells in response to light.
The finding may help explain how
people and animals are able to see in a wide range of lighting
conditions. Information about this protein's movement may also
help scientists better understand diseases such as night blindness
or macular degeneration, the leading cause of vision loss in Americans
over age 65.
The study was published online
in the journal Experimental Eye Research.
The protein is called visual arrestin.
It regulates a chemical reaction that's responsible for vision
that begins in the retina.
"The movement of arrestins
probably impacts how we're able to regulate the light sensitivity
of our eyes. If you go from a darkened theatre to bright sunlight,
the light intensity can increase by a factor of 10 billion. Not
many receptors are capable of dealing with that kind of range,
but our eyes can," researcher W. Clay Smith, an assistant
professor of ophthalmology, says in a news release.
He and his colleagues examined
retinal cells called rods. These rods operate in low-light conditions
but don't perceive color. The researchers traced arrestin's movement
in rod cells by introducing a gene derived from luminous jellyfish
into African clawed frog tadpoles.
That caused the tadpoles' eyes
to produce arrestin that glowed bright green when exposed to blue
light. That made it easy for the researchers to detect and photograph
the arrestin.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about eyes
and vision.
Reference
Source 101
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