Feigl Beatrix, Zele Andrew J
*MD, PhD †PhD Medical Retina and Visual Science Laboratories, Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (both authors).
Optom Vis Sci. 2014 Aug;91(8):894-903. doi: 10.1097/OPX.0000000000000284.
Melanopsin-containing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) are a class of photoreceptors with established roles in non-image-forming processes. Their contributions to image-forming vision may include the estimation of brightness. Animal models have been central for understanding the physiological mechanisms of ipRGC function and there is evidence of conservation of function across species. Intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells can be divided into five ganglion cell subtypes that show morphological and functional diversity. Research in humans has established that ipRGCs signal environmental irradiance to entrain the central body clock to the solar day for regulating circadian processes and sleep. In addition, ipRGCs mediate the pupil light reflex (PLR), making the PLR a readily accessible behavioral marker of ipRGC activity. Less is known about ipRGC function in retinal and optic nerve disease, with emerging research providing insight into their function in diabetes, retinitis pigmentosa, glaucoma, and hereditary optic neuropathy. We briefly review the anatomical distributions, projections, and basic physiological mechanisms of ipRGCs and their proposed and known functions in animals and humans with and without eye disease. We introduce a paradigm for differentiating inner and outer retinal inputs to the pupillary control pathway in retinal disease and apply this paradigm to patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In these cases of patients with AMD, we provide the initial evidence that ipRGC function is altered and that the dysfunction is more pronounced in advanced disease. Our perspective is that with refined pupillometry paradigms, the PLR can be extended to AMD assessment as a tool for the measurement of inner and outer retinal dysfunction.
含黑素的内在光敏性视网膜神经节细胞(ipRGCs)是一类在非成像过程中具有既定作用的光感受器。它们对成像视觉的贡献可能包括亮度估计。动物模型对于理解ipRGC功能的生理机制至关重要,并且有证据表明跨物种功能具有保守性。内在光敏性视网膜神经节细胞可分为五种神经节细胞亚型,表现出形态和功能多样性。对人类的研究已证实,ipRGCs将环境光照信号传递给中枢生物钟,使其与太阳日同步,以调节昼夜节律过程和睡眠。此外,ipRGCs介导瞳孔光反射(PLR),使PLR成为ipRGC活动易于获取的行为标志物。关于ipRGCs在视网膜和视神经疾病中的功能了解较少,新兴研究为其在糖尿病、色素性视网膜炎、青光眼和遗传性视神经病变中的功能提供了见解。我们简要回顾了ipRGCs的解剖分布、投射和基本生理机制,以及它们在患有和未患眼病的动物和人类中已提出的和已知的功能。我们引入了一种区分视网膜疾病中瞳孔控制通路的视网膜内、外输入的范式,并将该范式应用于年龄相关性黄斑变性(AMD)患者。在这些AMD患者中,我们提供了初步证据,表明ipRGC功能发生改变,且在晚期疾病中功能障碍更为明显。我们的观点是,通过改进的瞳孔测量范式,PLR可扩展用于AMD评估,作为测量视网膜内、外功能障碍的工具。