Cover Image: January 2013 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Cracking the Retinal Code

Silicon “eyes” to help people with deteriorating vision are around the corner














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Blindness is a private matter between a person and the eyes with which he or she was born.

The sentiment expressed by the late Portuguese writer José Saramago in his famous novel Blindness may be appropriate for a person born unable to see. But what about the tens of millions of people worldwide who suffer from a variety of degenerative diseases that progressively rob them of their eyesight? The problem arises in the nerve cells that line the back of their eyes, their retinas. Fortunately, help is on the way to restore some of the lost vision using advanced neuroengineering.

The hallmark of the two most common forms of adult-onset blindness in the West, age-related macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa, is that the photoreceptors responsible for converting the incoming rays of light into nervous energy gradually die off. Yet the roughly one million ganglion cells, whose output wires bundle up and leave the eyeball in the form of the optic nerve, remain intact. So visionary (pun intended) clinical ophthalmologists have paired up with technologists to bypass the defective parts of the retina by directly stimulating ganglion cells via advanced electronics. One of the most successful of such prosthetic devices, manufactured by a California company called Second Sight, uses a camera integrated into eyeglasses to convert images into electronic patterns. These patterns are sent to a small, 10- by six-pixel microelectrode array surgically positioned onto the retina. It stimulates neural processes that relay their information in the form of binary electrical pulses, so-called action potentials or spikes, to the brain proper.

Spikes are the universal idiom in which neurons communicate with one another. Once we understand their whispering language, the neural code, we will be much closer to deciphering the ancient mind-body riddle. The sparse information relayed by this prosthetic—using 60 rather than the millions of photoreceptor channels—nonetheless helps. A recent interim report on a clinical trial with 30 patients who have end-stage retinal degeneration and who carry a Second Sight visual prosthetic concluded that the devices were safe and efficient. That is, they unambiguously improved visual acuity. Whereas untreated subjects could only tell light from dark, those with the prosthetic could detect hand movements and some could even count fingers. Although their measured acuity (20/1,260 compared with 20/20 for perfect vision) still leaves them legally blind, they do see something.

It is widely assumed that these residual visual abilities will improve as finer electrode arrays with a larger number of stimulation sites become available. Given the relentless progress in integrated circuit technology, this enhancement will undoubtedly happen. Yet others argue that what is really needed are more sophisticated encoding strategies. Think about it: What would happen to your computer if you were to suddenly turn all the transistors in its central processing unit simultaneously on and off? Clearly, the more you know about how software instructions are turned into patterns of electrical charge on transistor gates, the more productively you could manipulate the computer, hacking its transistors.

Exploiting the Neural Code

Sheila Nirenberg, a neuroscience professor at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York City, and her Ph.D. student Chethan Pandarinath have just demonstrated this enhanced understanding of neural code by using the latest techno craze, optogenetics [see “Playing the Body Electric,” by Christof Koch; Scientific American Mind, March/April 2010]. This method targets specific groups of nerve cells in mice that have been infected with genetically modified viruses that express a protein called channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2). The viruses cause the neurons to express ChR2 in their surface membrane; ChR2 is a light-sensitive protein that responds to blue light. Shoot a pulse of blue light at a cell that expresses it, and it will respond with an electric signal that, if large enough, leads to an action potential. Any group of neurons can be made to fire on command provided that they carry the molecular signature targeted by the virus. Nerve cells that do not have the appropriate molecular signature will not express ChR2. Optogenetics is hot because it allows researchers to deliberately intercede at any point within the tightly woven networks of the brain, moving from observation to manipulation, from correlation to causation.


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  1. 1. darklight_413 04:26 PM 1/29/13

    Unfortunately, as we are still mutilating other animals for "scientific research", we are still very, very primitive, even barbaric, and have a long way to go to get to the technological level where we need to be.

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  2. 2. Modelrail 04:37 PM 1/29/13

    Undoubtedly you are fully sighted. For those of us at great risk of becoming fully blind, this work is greatly appreciated.

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  3. 3. Poppa beer 04:57 AM 1/30/13

    May the good work continue

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