Following exposure of our eye to very intense illumination, we experience a greatly elevated visual threshold, that takes tens of minutes to return completely to normal. The slowness of this phenomenon of "dark adaptation" has been studied for many decades, yet is still not fully understood. Here we review the biochemical and physical processes involved in eliminating the products of light absorption from the photoreceptor outer segment, in recycling the released retinoid to its original isomeric form as 11-cis retinal, and in regenerating the visual pigment rhodopsin. Then we analyse the time-course of three aspects of human dark adaptation: the recovery of psychophysical threshold, the recovery of rod photoreceptor circulating current, an...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
Dark adaptation (DA) refers to the slow recovery of visual sensitivity in darkness following exposur...
The time course of dark adaptation was measured in 10 subjects from three families with autosomal do...
Vision requires the photoreceptors in the eye to rapidly respond to changes in light intensity. The...
AbstractAbsorption of photons by pigments in photoreceptor cells results in photoisomerization of th...
Following photopigment bleaching, the rhodopsin and cone-opsins show a characteristic exponential re...
AbstractThe recovery of rod responsiveness after saturating flashes is greatly retarded above a cert...
AbstractThe first step toward light perception is 11-cis to all-trans photoisomerization of the reti...
Following photopigment bleaching, the rhodopsin and cone-opsins show a characteristic exponential re...
AbstractThe first step toward light perception is 11-cis to all-trans photoisomerization of the reti...
AbstractDark adaptation requires timely deactivation of phototransduction and efficient regeneration...
AbstractRegeneration of visual pigments of vertebrate rod and cone photoreceptors occurs by the init...
AbstractDark adaptation requires timely deactivation of phototransduction and efficient regeneration...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
Dark adaptation (DA) refers to the slow recovery of visual sensitivity in darkness following exposur...
The time course of dark adaptation was measured in 10 subjects from three families with autosomal do...
Vision requires the photoreceptors in the eye to rapidly respond to changes in light intensity. The...
AbstractAbsorption of photons by pigments in photoreceptor cells results in photoisomerization of th...
Following photopigment bleaching, the rhodopsin and cone-opsins show a characteristic exponential re...
AbstractThe recovery of rod responsiveness after saturating flashes is greatly retarded above a cert...
AbstractThe first step toward light perception is 11-cis to all-trans photoisomerization of the reti...
Following photopigment bleaching, the rhodopsin and cone-opsins show a characteristic exponential re...
AbstractThe first step toward light perception is 11-cis to all-trans photoisomerization of the reti...
AbstractDark adaptation requires timely deactivation of phototransduction and efficient regeneration...
AbstractRegeneration of visual pigments of vertebrate rod and cone photoreceptors occurs by the init...
AbstractDark adaptation requires timely deactivation of phototransduction and efficient regeneration...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
While rods in the mammalian retina regenerate rhodopsin through a well-characterized pathway in cell...
Dark adaptation (DA) refers to the slow recovery of visual sensitivity in darkness following exposur...