| Literature DB >> 20808732 |
Bruce A Berkowitz1, Robin Roberts, David Bissig.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To test the hypothesis that in young, functionally blind mice, light-dependent intraretinal ion regulation occurs via melanopsin.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20808732 PMCID: PMC2929942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Vis ISSN: 1090-0535 Impact factor: 2.367
Figure 1Representative manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI) data of P7 wild type (WT; top row) and melanopsin knock out (KO; bottom row) mouse eyes following either dark (left column) or light (right column) adaptation. The white circle indicates the region of extraocular muscle used to normalize retinal signal intensities in this figure and in Figure 2. The same muscle-normalized signal intensity scale (far right) was used for all images and in all analyses. Retinal signal intensity data in Figure 2 were extracted from the central retina (0 to 30% of the retinal extent or the region between the arrows). The width of each image is 4.14 mm.
Figure 2Retinal signal intensity data, normalized to muscle, for light (blue symbols (means) and lines (SEMs)) and dark (black symbols (means) and lines (SEMs)) plotted as a function of distance from the vitreous-retina border (0%) to the retinal-choroid border (100%) for wild type (WT; left graph) and knock out (KO; right graph) mice. The red line indicates the retinal region demonstrating a significant difference (p<0.05) between light- and dark-adapted WT mice.