Soulmate Gem
Photo: Anna Shvets
Most researchers believe that human retinal neurons become swiftly non-functional after death. In the study, researchers confirmed this rapid loss of retinal function in mice, using a method called electroretinography (ERG) to track the decline in retinal neuron activity in the minutes after death.
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Read More »To enable these experiments, Hanneken collected tissues with the help of the San Diego Eye Bank and the organ donor society Lifesharing and optimized the surgical recovery of the human eyes. Vinberg used his biomedical and electrical engineering background to design a transportation unit to restore the oxygenation of the organ donor eyes and build the ERG device to stimulate and measure the retina. Overall, researchers say, the experiments generated an unprecedented trove of data on the physiology of human vision. The techniques they developed also offer a new way to study the retina in health and disease—and to test drugs, retinal patch transplants, and other strategies against retinal ailments. “One unique aspect of this study was the highly collaborative work from people and organizations that started about five years ago and persisted,” says Hanneken. “We spent years getting no light signals at all from human eyes. It was perseverance through lots of failures that eventually resulted in this success, which we think will lead to a transformative understanding of human eyesight.” “Revival of light signalling in the postmortem mouse and human retina” was co-authored by Fatima Abbas, Silke Becker, Bryan Jones and Frans Vinberg of the University of Utah; Ludovic Mure and Satchidananda Panda of the Salk Institute; and Anne Hanneken of Scripps Research. The research was supported by, among others, the National Institutes of Health (P30 EY014800, UL1 TR002550, EY031706, R01 EY015128, R01 EY028927), the Daro Foundation, the A. C. Israel Foundation, the Warren Family Foundation, the Renaissance Charitable Foundation, The Rancho Santa Fe Foundation, the Money Arenz Foundation, the Considine Foundation, the Fonseca Foundation, the Pfeiffer Foundation, the Mericos Eye Institute, and the Thomas and Audrey Pine Foundation.
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