Chlorophyll derivatives as visual pigments for super vision in the red
Washington
Ilyas
author
Columbia University. Ophthalmology
Zhou
Jilin
author
Columbia University. Ophthalmology
Jockusch
Steffen
author
Columbia University. Chemistry
Turro
Nicholas J.
author
Columbia University. Chemistry
Columbia University. Chemical Engineering
Columbia University. Earth and Environmental Engineering
Nakanishi
Koji
author
Columbia University. Chemistry
Sparrow
Janet R.
author
Columbia University. Ophthalmology
Columbia University. Pathology and Cell Biology
Columbia University. Chemistry
originator
text
Articles
2007
English
The primary event in vision is light-initiated activation of visual pigments. All visual pigments consist of the protein opsin bound to 11-cis-retinal and are responsible for initiating the transformation of light into an electrical signal. In a mouse model, we show that derivatives of chlorophyll can act as visual pigments initiating the transformation of light into an electrical signal and thus change the primary event in vision to initial activation of a chlorophyll derivative. Electroretinographic b-wave amplitudes recorded in response to red and blue light were two-fold greater in mice administered chlorin e6, which accumulated in photoreceptor outer segments.
Chemistry
Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences
6
7
775
779
2007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b618104j
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:8601
NNC
NNC
2010-03-24 12:28:27 -0400
2013-02-19 15:35:40 -0500
1009
eng