Could a blind eye regenerate? - David Davila

336,604 views ・ 2015-01-15

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Imagine that day by day,
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your field of vision becomes slightly smaller,
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narrowing or dimming
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until eventually you go completely blind.
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We tend to think of blindness as something you're born with,
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but in fact, with many diseases like Retinitis pigmentosa
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and Usher syndrome,
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blindness can start developing when you're a kid,
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or even when you're an adult.
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Both of these rare genetic diseases affect the retina,
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the screen at the back of the eye that detects light and helps us see.
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Now imagine if the eye could regenerate itself
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so that a blind person could see again.
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To understand if that's possible, we need to grasp how the retina works
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and what it has to do with a multitalented creature
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named the zebrafish.
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The human retina is made of different layers of cells,
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with special neurons that live in the back of the eye
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called rod and cone photoreceptors.
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Photoreceptors convert the light coming into your eye
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into signals that the brain uses to generate vision.
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People who have Usher syndrome and retinitis pigmentosa
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experience a steady loss of these photoreceptors
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until finally that screen in the eye can no longer detect light
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nor broadcast signals to the brain.
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Unlike most of your body's cells, photoreceptors don't divide and multiply.
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We're born with all the photoreceptors we'll ever have,
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which is why babies have such big eyes for their faces
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and part of why they're so cute.
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But that isn't the case for all animals.
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Take the zebrafish, a master regenerator.
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It can grow back its skin, bones, heart and retina after they've been damaged.
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If photoreceptors in the zebrafish retina are removed or killed by toxins,
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they just regenerate and rewire themselves to the brain to restore sight.
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Scientists have been investigating this superpower
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because zebrafish retina are also structured very much like human retina.
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Scientists can even mimic the effects of disorders like Usher syndrome
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or retinitis pigmentosa on the zebrafish eye.
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This allows them to see how zebrafish go about repairing their retinas
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so they might use similar tactics to fix human eyes one day, too.
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So what's behind the zebrafish's superpower?
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The main players are sets of long cells that stretch across the retina
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called Müller glia.
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When the photoreceptors are damaged, these cells transform,
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taking on a new character.
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They become less like Müller cells and more like stem cells,
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which can turn into any kind of cell.
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Then these long cells divide,
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producing extras that will eventually grow into new photoreceptors,
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travel to the back of the eye and rewire themselves into the brain.
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And now some researchers even think they've found the key to how this works
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with the help of one of two chemicals that create activity in the brain
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called glutamate and aminoadipate.
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In mouse eyes,
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these make the Müller glia divide and transform into photoreceptors,
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which then travel to the back of the retina,
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like they're replenishing a failing army with new soldiers.
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But remember, none of this has happened in our retinas yet,
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so the question is how do we trigger this transformation of the Müller glia
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in the human eye?
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How can we fully control this process?
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How do photoreceptors rewire themselves into the retina?
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And is it even possible to trigger this in humans?
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Or has this mechanism been lost over time in evolution?
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Until we tease apart the origins of this ability,
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retinal regeneration will remain a mysterious superpower
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of the common zebrafish.
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