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Quantitative mapping of ion channel regulation by visual cycle activity in rodent photoreceptors in vivo.

Authors:
Bruce A Berkowitz Robin Roberts Deanna A Oleske Myungwon Chang Stephen Schafer David Bissig Marius Gradianu

Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2009 Apr 5;50(4):1880-5. Epub 2008 Dec 5.

Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.

Purpose: To test the hypothesis that the extent of outer retina uptake of manganese, measured noninvasively with manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI), is a quantitative biomarker of photoreceptor ion channel regulation by visual cycle activity.

Methods: Four groups of animals were studied: control rats adapted to three different background light intensities, dark-adapted control mice systemically pretreated with retinylamine, and dark-adapted mice with a nonsense mutation in exon 3 of the RPE65 gene (RPE65(rd12)) with and without systemic 11-cis-retinal pretreatment. In all cases, rodents were anesthetized and studied with MEMRI 4 hours after manganese administration IP. Central retinal thickness and intraretinal ion channel regulation were measured from the MEMRI data.

Result: No differences (P>0.05) in retinal thickness were noted within any arm of this study. In rats, manganese uptake was inversely proportional to the background light intensity in the outer retina but not in the inner retina. Specific inhibition at the level of RPE65 activity, either acutely with retinylamine or chronically in RPE65(rd12) mice, similarly reduced (P<0.05) outer retinal manganese uptake compared with that in control mice. In RPE65(rd12) mice, outer retinal manganese uptake returned to normal (P>0.05) after 11-cis retinal treatment. Inner retinal uptake was supernormal (P<0.05) in retinylamine-treated mice but normal in untreated or 11-cis treated RPE65(rd12) mice.

Conclusions: The present data support measuring the extent of manganese uptake in the outer retina as an analytic noninvasive metric of visual cycle regulation of photoreceptor ion channel activity in vivo.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/iovs.08-2958DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2696261PMC
April 2009

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