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Photo transduction and image formation. B y Prof Dr . Soheir helmy. Layers of the eye ball. OUTER layer (protective) Middle layer (nutritive) iris cilliary body choroid Inner layer (retina-photosensetive). Physiological anatomy of the eye. The retina.
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Photo transductionand image formation By Prof Dr. Soheirhelmy
Layers of the eye ball • OUTER layer (protective) • Middle layer (nutritive) • iris cilliary body choroid • Inner layer (retina-photosensetive)
The retina It is the innermost layer of the eyeball. Histologically it is formed of 10 layers. Physiological:- layer of pigmented cells layer of rods & cones {photoreceptors} layer of bipolar cells. layer of ganglion cells.
The retina 1)the retinal pigmented epithelium :- Functions:- 1- contain pigments which absorb light and prevent its reflection inside the eye. 2-store large amount of vit. A 3- phagocytosis of old rods and cones. 4-produce sticky extracellular matrix
photoreceptors • A photoreceptor cell is a specialized type of neuron found in the retina that is capable of photo transduction. • they convert light (visible electromagnetic radiation) into signals that can stimulate biological processes • .there are two types of photoreceptors:- • Rods • cones
photoreceptors • It is composed of :- • 1-Outer segment • 2-Inner segment • 3- synaptic part The outer segment consists of a stack of discs embedded in the cell membrane. The photoreceptor's light-sensitive pigments are located on these discs. (rhodopsin)rodshave a long, cylindrical, outer segment with many discs • while cones have a short, tapering outer segment with relatively few discs.
Each disk contains:- • 1- photopigment (rhodopsin) • 2- G protien transducin • 3-CGMP phpspho diesterase enzyme
Photoreceptor potential • In the dark: receptor potential equals -40 mv • Dark current • Unstimulated (in the dark), cyclic-nucleotide gated channels in the outer segment are open because cyclic GMP (cGMP) is bound to them. • positively charged ions sodiumions) enter the photoreceptor, depolarizing it to about −40 mV (resting ) • in other nerve cells is usually −70 mV). This depolarizing current is often known as dark current.
1-When light hits a photoreceptive pigment within the photoreceptor cell .2- The pigment, called iodopsin or rhodopsin, consists of large proteins called opsin and retinal (a derivative of vitamin A). 3-The retinal. activate a regulatory protein called transducin which leads to the activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase, which breaks cGMP allows the ion channels to close, preventing the influx of positive ions, hyperpolarizing the cell, and stopping the release of neurotransmitters
Special areas of the retina • 1- optic disc ( blind spot) • 2-fovea centralis • 3- extra foveal area
1- optic disc ( blind spot ) it is slight medial to posterior of the globe. No rods or cons >>>not sensitive to light. It is the optic nerve head Blood vessels enter & leave the eye at this point. Overlap of two visual field>>cannot notice it
It is the area of acute vision. It contains only cones. All retinal layers are pulled aside to allow light to fall directly on the receptors. The fovea centralis
Image formation • Light reflects on an object ,and if one is looking at the object- it enters the eye. • Light rays pass through the cornea, aqueous humor, lens, and vitreous humor. All these structure reflect the light that it falls on the retina. This is called focusing. • Maximum focusing is done by the cornea and the lens.