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Human retinal dark adaptation tracked in vivo with the electroretinogram: insights into processes underlying recovery of cone- and rod-mediated vision

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 600, Issue 21, Pages 4603-4621

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP283105

Keywords

cone photoreceptors; dark adaptation; electroretinographyy; retina; retinal bipolar cells; rod photoreceptors

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [206619/Z/17/Z]
  2. Moorfields Eye Charity
  3. Wellcome Trust [206619/Z/17/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Research on the time taken for regaining visual sensitivity (dark adaptation) following bleaching exposures has found that it takes 30 minutes for rod-driven vision to recover, while cone-driven vision recovers within 100 milliseconds. These findings provide insights into the physiological processes underlying dark adaptation and may have clinical implications in the future.
The substantial time taken for regaining visual sensitivity (dark adaptation) following bleaching exposures has been investigated for over a century. Psychophysical studies yielded the classic biphasic curve representing recovery of cone-driven and rod-driven vision. The electroretinogram (ERG) permits direct assessment of recovery at the level of the retina (photoreceptors, bipolar cells), with the first report over 70 years ago. Over the last two decades, ERG studies of dark adaptation have generated insights into underlying physiological processes. After large bleaches, rod photoreceptor circulating current, estimated from the rod-isolated bright-flash ERG a-wave, takes 30 min to recover, indicating that products of bleaching, thought to be free opsin (unbound to 11-cis-retinal), continue to activate phototransduction, shutting off rod circulating current. In contrast, cone current, assessed with cone-driven bright-flash ERG a-waves, recovers within 100 ms following similar exposures, suggesting that free opsin is less able to shut off cone current. The cone-driven dim-flash a-wave can be used to track recovery of cone photopigment, showing regeneration is 'rate-limited' rather than first order. Recoveries of the dim-flash ERG b-wave are consistent also with rate-limited rod photopigment regeneration (where free opsin, desensitising the visual system as an 'equivalent background', is removed by rate-limited delivery of 11-cis-retinal). These findings agree with psychophysical and retinal densitometry studies, although there are unexplained points of divergence. Post-bleach ERG recovery has been explored in age-related macular degeneration and in trials of visual cycle inhibitors for retinal diseases. ERG tracking of dark adaptation may prove useful in future clinical contexts.

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