A discovery about how some visually impaired adults could start to see offers a new vision of the brain’s possibilities. The finding that the adult brain has the potential to partially recover from inherited blindness comes from a collaboration between researchers. Their paper appears in Current Biology.
The team was examining treatment for Leber congenital amaurosis, known as LCA. The term refers to a group of inherited retinal diseases distinguished by severe visual impairment at birth. The condition, which stems from mutations in any of over two dozen genes, causes degeneration or dysfunction in the retina’s photoreceptors.
Administering chemical compounds that target the retina, called synthetic retinoids, can restore a notable amount of vision in children with LCA. The team wanted to find out if the treatment could make a difference for adults who have the condition.
“Frankly, we were blown away by how much the treatment rescued brain circuits involved in vision,” said the corresponding author. “Seeing involves more than intact and functioning retinae. It starts in the eye, which sends signals throughout the brain. It’s in the central circuits of the brain where visual perception actually arises.” Until now, scientists believed that the brain must receive those signals in childhood so that central circuits could wire themselves correctly.
Working with rodent models of LCA, the collaborators were surprised by what they found. “The central visual pathway signaling was significantly restored in adults, especially the circuits that deal with information coming from both eyes,” the author said.
“Immediately after the treatment, the signals coming from the opposite-side eye, which is the dominant pathway in the mouse, activated two times more neurons in the brain. What was even more mind-blowing was that the signals coming from the same-side eye pathway activated five-fold more neurons in the brain after the treatment and this impressive effect was long-lasting. The restoration of visual function at the level of the brain was much greater than expected from the improvements we saw at the level of the retinae. The fact that this treatment works so well in the central visual pathway in adulthood supports a new concept, which is that there is latent potential for vision that is just waiting to be triggered.”
The finding opens exciting research possibilities. “Whenever you have a discovery that breaks with your expectations about the possibility for the brain to adapt and rewire, it teaches you a broader concept,” the author said. “This new paradigm could aid in the development of retinoid therapies to more completely rescue the central visual pathway of adults with this condition.”
https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(22)01449-X
http://sciencemission.com/site/index.php?page=news&type=view&id=publications%2Fretinoid-therapy&filter=22
Recovering from inherited blindness using synthetic retinoid therapy
- 688 views
- Added
Latest News
Humans can intermittently r…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Why young kids don't get se…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Phosphatidylinositol 3,5-bi…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Probiotic-guided CAR-T cell…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Cell atlases of the human b…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Other Top Stories
Obesity more dangerous than lack of fitness
Read more
Bones of obese children may be in trouble
Read more
Unsynching the heartbeat a bit each day halts worsening heart failure
Read more
Tooth fillings of the future may incorporate bioactive glass
Read more
Low zinc levels may suggest potential breast-feeding problems
Read more
Protocols
Cheap, cost-effective, and…
By newseditor
Posted 03 Dec
Temporally multiplexed imag…
By newseditor
Posted 02 Dec
Efficient elimination of ME…
By newseditor
Posted 01 Dec
Personalized drug screening…
By newseditor
Posted 30 Nov
Multi-chamber cardioids unr…
By newseditor
Posted 29 Nov
Publications
Behavioral and brain respon…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Toward low-cost gene therap…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
The bidirectional immune cr…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Leveraging human immune org…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Single-cell long-read seque…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Dec
Presentations
Hydrogels in Drug Delivery
By newseditor
Posted 12 Apr
Lipids
By newseditor
Posted 31 Dec
Cell biology of carbohydrat…
By newseditor
Posted 29 Nov
RNA interference (RNAi)
By newseditor
Posted 23 Oct
RNA structure and functions
By newseditor
Posted 19 Oct
Posters
A chemical biology/modular…
By newseditor
Posted 22 Aug
Single-molecule covalent ma…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Jul
ASCO-2020-HEALTH SERVICES R…
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar
ASCO-2020-HEAD AND NECK CANCER
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar
ASCO-2020-GENITOURINARY CAN…
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar