Experiments conducted under the leadership of a Stanford University School of Medicine investigator have succeeded, for the first time, in restoring multiple key aspects of vision in mammals.
In experiments in mice described in a study published online July 11 in Nature Neuroscience, the scientists coaxed
That unprecedented, if partial, restoration could pave the way to future work that enables blind people to see.
The animals’ condition prior to the scientists’ efforts to regrow the
Glaucoma, caused by excessive pressure on the optic nerve, affects nearly 70 million people worldwide. Vision loss due to
Thin sheet of cells
The retina, a thin sheet of cells no more than half as thick as a credit card, is the
«Somehow the brain can interpret these electrical signals to say, ‘Wow, that’s a
«More than a third of the human brain is dedicated to the processing of visual information," he said. «Over two dozen brain areas get direct signals from retinal ganglion cells. These areas are involved in not only what we typically think of as vision, but also circadian rhythms and mood.»
Retinal ganglion cells are the only nerve cells connecting the eye to the brain, said Huberman. «When those cells’ axons are severed, it’s like pulling the vision plug right out of the outlet," he added.
Axons in eye don’t regenerate
When axons in the brain and spinal cord of a mammal such as a mouse or a human have been damaged, they don’t regenerate on their own. (The only known exception is olfactory sensory nerve cells.) The retina, too, is actually part of the brain, said Huberman. Damage to mammalian retinal ganglion cells’ axons spells permanent vision loss.
Mammalian axons located outside the central nervous system do regenerate, though. And during early development, brain and
While many factors are responsible for adult brain cells’ lack of regenerative capacity, one
In the study, adult mice in which the optic nerve in one eye had been crushed were treated with either a regimen of intensive daily exposure to
Importantly, while retinal ganglion cells’ axons in the crushed optic nerve had been obliterated, the
Success of combined approach
While either visual stimulation or
«Somehow these retinal ganglion cells’ axons retained their own GPS systems," Huberman said. «They went to the right places, and they did not go to the wrong places.»
Tests of the mice’s vision indicated that visual input from the photoreceptor cells in their damaged eye was reaching retinal ganglion cells in the same eye and, crucially, being conveyed to appropriate downstream brain structures essential to processing that visual input. One test, for example, involved the projection of an expanding dark circle — analogous to a bird of prey’s approach — onto the visual field of the damaged eye. In response, most of the mice subjected to both
In other words, the regenerating axons, having grown back to diverse brain structures, had established functional links with these targets. The mice’s
Restored vision incomplete
However, even mice whose behavior showed restored vision on some tests, including the one described above, failed other tests that probably required finer visual discrimination, said Huberman. He noted that the investigators could prove that axons from two specific retinal ganglion cell types had reached their targets, but lacked molecular labels that would have let them determine whether axons emanating from the rest of the other subtypes had done so. Further progress, he suggested, will depend on boosting total numbers of retinal ganglion cell axons that successfully extend back to and establish former contact with their target structures, as well as finding ways to engage and assess most or all of the roughly 30 subtypes of retinal ganglion cells.
«We’re working on that now," Huberman said.