John A. Moran Eye Center Focus 2021

Page 23

Research Spotlight

SHEDDING

New Light Color Vision ON HUMAN

The National Institutes of Health awarded Frans Vinberg, PhD, his first major federal Research Project Grant. There are millions of them in our eye’s retina—special photoreceptor cells known as rods and cones that allow us to perceive a wide range of light intensities and colors. Backed by a new five-year, $2 million National Eye Institute Research Project Grant, the lab of Moran’s Frans Vinberg, PhD, is seeking a deeper understanding of photoreceptors and how major blinding diseases, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and diabetic retinopathy, affect them. “There is a critical need to better understand the biology of the photoreceptors in the human retina and macula in health and disease,” said Vinberg, who joined the Moran Eye Center in 2017. “This is particularly true of cone photoreceptors, compared to rods that have been more extensively studied.” Cones are concentrated in the macula, the small but significant area in the center of the light-sensitive retina. Cones give us color vision and help us see fine details.

Frans Vinberg, PhD. Rods, which aid good vision in low light, concentrate in the outer areas of the retina and give us peripheral vision. The human retina has about 100 million rods and 5 million cones. Vinberg’s research is unique because it will rely on donated human tissue accessed via collaborations with U.S. eye banks and organ donor societies. Important past research into light and dark adaptation in the retina has used animal models lacking a macula. “Very little is known about photoreceptor mechanisms in the human macula,” he continued. “The long-term goals of our project will seek to change this.

We want to generate new knowledge about healthy eyes and explore macular dystrophies to identify potential targets for new therapies that could improve vision or prevent vision loss in aging or diseased human eyes.” In related research, Vinberg’s lab in 2020 collaborated in a groundbreaking study related to photoreceptors that provided insight on how people with retinal degenerative disease can maintain their night vision for a relatively long period. Read the study at pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih. gov/32960171/.

21


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Articles inside

Ophthalmologists and Optometrists 2020-2021

23min
pages 45-51

Research Publications

28min
pages 70-76

Research Team 2020-2021

6min
pages 52-55

Residents and Fellows 2020-2021

4min
pages 38-39

Clinical Trials/Studies

8min
pages 77-80

Grand Rounds

5min
pages 81-84

Technology Commercialization and Intellectual Property/Patents

2min
page 85

Research Grants

1min
pages 68-69

Supporting Student Physician-Scientists

2min
page 40

Connecting Fellows to Advance Global Ophthalmology

1min
page 37

Confronting the Growing Problem of Worldwide Blindness

2min
page 36

Thinking Globally, Acting Locally

2min
pages 34-35

There for Utah

1min
pages 32-33

A Legacy of Giving

3min
pages 30-31

A Generous Life—Well Lived

13min
pages 6-15

Patient Support Program: Understanding and Help

3min
pages 28-29

When the World Paused, Moran Didn’t

3min
pages 26-27

The Rise of Teleophthalmology

3min
pages 24-25

Shedding New Light on Human Color Vision

1min
page 23

Preventing Blinding Disease In Premature Babies

1min
page 22

Message from the Chair: An Enduring Vision

2min
pages 4-5

Reading the Language of the Eye

3min
pages 20-21

New Hope in the World's First 'Pathoconnectome'

6min
pages 16-19

Highlights: Awards and Honors

7min
pages 41-44
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