Light adaptation characteristics of melanopsin

Vision Res. 2021 Nov:188:126-138. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2021.07.005. Epub 2021 Jul 24.

Abstract

Following photopigment bleaching, the rhodopsin and cone-opsins show a characteristic exponential regeneration in the dark with a photocycle dependent on the retinal pigment epithelium. Melanopsin pigment regeneration in animal models requires different pathways to rods and cones. To quantify melanopsin-mediated light adaptation in humans, we first estimated its photopigment regeneration kinetics through the photo-bleach recovery of the intrinsic melanopsin pupil light response (PLR). An intense broadband light (~120,000 Td) bleached 43% of melanopsin compared to 86% of the cone-opsins. Recovery from a 43% bleach was 3.4X slower for the melanopsin than cone-opsin. Post-bleach melanopsin regeneration followed an exponential growth with a 2.5 min time-constant (τ) that required 11.2 min for complete recovery; the half-bleaching level (Ip) was ~ 4.47 log melanopic Td (16.10 log melanopsin effective photons.cm-2.s-1; 8.25 log photoisomerisations.photoreceptor-1.s-1). The effect on the cone-directed PLR of the level of the melanopsin excitation during continuous light adaptation was then determined. We observed that cone-directed pupil constriction amplitudes increased by ~ 10% when adapting lights had a higher melanopic excitation but the same mean photometric luminance. Our findings suggest that melanopsin light adaptation enhances cone signalling along the non-visual retina-brain axis. Parameters τ and Ip will allow estimation of the level of melanopsin bleaching in any light units; the data have implications for quantifying the relative contributions of putative melanopsin pathways to regulate the post-bleach photopigment regeneration and adaptation.

Keywords: Dark adaptation; Light adaptation; Melanopsin; Photopigment bleaching; Photopigment regeneration; Pupil light response.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Ocular
  • Dark Adaptation
  • Humans
  • Light
  • Photobleaching*
  • Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells
  • Retinal Rod Photoreceptor Cells*
  • Rod Opsins* / radiation effects

Substances

  • Rod Opsins
  • melanopsin