MCELLBI C61 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Opsin, Achromatopsia, Rhodopsin

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Vision is responding to visible light (~400-700 nm) within the electromagnetic spectrum. Color doesn"t exist in the world, there"s just electromagnetic energy. Has the cornea, pupil, + lens focus light onto the retina, a layer of neuronal tissue where the light interacts with photoreceptor cells to produce an electrical signal that enters the brain via the optic nerve. The retina is made of layers of neuronal cells, and at the fovea, there"s a dip in the retina that gives the light easy access to the photoreceptors. Rod photoreceptors: contain rhodopsin proteins, which are sensitive to dim light. There are more and more rods as you progress away from the fovea. 100 million rod cells per eye in the retina. Cone photoreceptors: contain cone-opsin proteins, which are sensitive to bright light. 3 cones, each sensitive di erent wavelengths of light: s-cones, m-cones, + l-cones. The number of cones peak at the fovea. 5 million cone cells per eye in the retina.

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