The optoretinogram reveals the primary steps of phototransduction in the living human eye.
Vimal Prabhu PandiyanAiden Maloney-BertelliJames A KuchenbeckerKevin C BoyleTong LingZhijie Charles ChenB Hyle ParkAustin RoordaDaniel PalankerRamkumar SabesanPublished in: Science advances (2020)
Photoreceptors initiate vision by converting photons to electrical activity. The onset of the phototransduction cascade is marked by the isomerization of photopigments upon light capture. We revealed that the onset of phototransduction is accompanied by a rapid (<5 ms), nanometer-scale electromechanical deformation in individual human cone photoreceptors. Characterizing this biophysical phenomenon associated with phototransduction in vivo was enabled by high-speed phase-resolved optical coherence tomography in a line-field configuration that allowed sufficient spatiotemporal resolution to visualize the nanometer/millisecond-scale light-induced shape change in photoreceptors. The deformation was explained as the optical manifestation of electrical activity, caused due to rapid charge displacement following isomerization, resulting in changes of electrical potential and surface tension within the photoreceptor disc membranes. These all-optical recordings of light-induced activity in the human retina constitute an optoretinogram and hold remarkable potential to reveal the biophysical correlates of neural activity in health and disease.
Keyphrases
- high speed
- endothelial cells
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- optical coherence tomography
- high resolution
- healthcare
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- atomic force microscopy
- multiple sclerosis
- mental health
- human health
- single cell
- risk assessment
- diabetic retinopathy
- climate change
- ms ms
- single molecule
- social media
- optic nerve