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What
drives Brain Changes in Macular
Degeneration?
Newswise — In macular degeneration, the most
common form of adult blindness, patients
progressively lose vision in the center of
their visual field, thereby depriving the
corresponding part of the visual cortex of
input.
Previously, researchers discovered that the
deprived neurons begin responding to visual
input from another spot on the retina —
evidence of plasticity in the adult cortex.
Just how such plasticity occurred was
unknown, but a new MIT study sheds light on
the underlying neural mechanism.
“This study shows us one way that the brain
changes when its inputs change. Neurons seem
to ‘want’ to receive input: when their usual
input disappears, they start responding to
the next best thing,” said Nancy Kanwisher
of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research
at MIT and senior author of the study
appearing in the March 4 issue of the
Journal of Neuroscience.
“Our study shows that the changes we see in
neural response in people with MD are
probably driven by the lack of input to a
population of neurons, not by a change in
visual information processing strategy,”
said Kanwisher, the Ellen Swallow Richards
Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience in MIT’s
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences.
Macular degeneration affects 1.75 million
people in the United States alone.
Loss of vision begins in the fovea of the
retina — the central area providing high
acuity vision that we use for reading and
other visually demanding tasks.
Patients typically compensate by using an
adjacent patch of undamaged retina.
This “preferred retinal locus” (PRL) is
often below the blind region in the visual
field, leading patients to roll their eyes
upward to look at someone’s face, for
example.
The visual cortex has a map of the visual
field on the retina, and in macular
degeneration the neurons mapping to the
fovea no longer receive input.
But several labs, including Kanwisher’s,
previously found that the neurons in the
visual cortex that once responded only to
input from central vision begin responding
to stimuli at the PRL.
In other words, the visual map has
reorganized.
“We wanted to know if the chronic, prior use
of the PRL causes the cortical change that
we had observed in the past, according to
what we call the use-dependent hypothesis,”
said first author Daniel D. Dilks, a
postdoctoral fellow in the Kanwisher lab.
“Or, do the deprived neurons respond to
stimulation at any peripheral location,
regardless of prior visual behavior,
according to the use-independent
hypothesis?”
The previous studies could not answer this
question because they had only tested
patients’ PRL.
This new study tests both the PRL and
another peripheral location, using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
to scan two macular degeneration patients
who had no central vision, and consequently
had a deprived central visual cortex.
Because patients habitually use the PRL like
a new fovea, it could be that the deprived
cortex might respond preferentially to this
location.
But that is not what the researchers found.
Instead, the deprived region responded
equally to stimuli at both the preferred and
nonpreferred locations.
This finding suggests that the long-term
change in visual behavior is not driving the
brain’s remapping. Instead, the brain
changes appear to be a relatively passive
response to visual deprivation.
“Macular degeneration is a great opportunity
to learn more about plasticity in the adult
cortex.” Kanwisher said.
If scientists could one day develop
technologies to replace the lost
light-sensitive cells in the fovea, patients
might be able to recover central vision
since the neurons there are still alive and
well.
Chris Baker of the Laboratory of Brain and
Cognition (NIMH) and Eli Peli of the
Schepens Eye Research Institute also
contributed to this study, which was
supported by the NIH, Kirschstein-NRSA, and
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Byrne.
About the McGovern
Institute at MIT
The McGovern Institute for Brain Research at
MIT is led by a team of world-renowned
neuroscientists committed to meeting two
great challenges of modern science:
understanding how the brain works and
discovering new ways to prevent or treat
brain disorders.
The McGovern Institute was established in
2000 by Patrick J. McGovern and Lore Harp
McGovern, who are committed to improving
human welfare, communication and
understanding through their support for
neuroscience research.
The director is Robert Desimone, formerly
the head of intramural research at the
National Institute of Mental Health. Further
information is available at:
http://web.mit.edu/mcgovern/
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