Blind Mice See Again After Cell Transplants 107
Korbinus writes, "Scientists have managed to restore vision in blind mice by transplanting light-sensitive cells in their eyes, cells on their way to become photoreceptors. This might be a important step towards new treatments of eye disease."
I wonder ... (Score:4, Funny)
one down (Score:5, Funny)
awesome! (Score:4, Funny)
Dashed childhood (Score:4, Funny)
Blind mice (Score:3, Funny)
three blind mice... (Score:2, Funny)
Would work for some (Score:5, Insightful)
And, of course, this only works on mice. Why is it that mice always get the best treatments?
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Now that's just cheesy.
Even I want to mod me down for that one.
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Not Only the Democrats Have One (Score:4, Funny)
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See what tortoise stem cells do? (Score:2)
Prove it... (Score:4, Interesting)
"Now Petey, give us two squeeks if you can see again!"
I knew we forgot something! (Score:2)
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Cell Transplants? (Score:1, Funny)
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They also get the worst.
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
This comes after last weeks news that Little Miss Muffet didn't know what a "tuffet" was at the time of the incident with the spider, and that her subsequent testimony was completely fabricated by her lawyers.
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1) The ganglion cells are the projection cells of the retina. If you assume that the visual cortex is already mapped, and the ganglion cells survive, the mapping remains intact.
2) Which brings up problem #2 What everybody needs to realize is that if you wait until the photoreceptors degenerate, it is too late in that downstream changes are taking place in the bipolar cells, amacrine cells, horiztonal cells, Muller cells and ganglion cells. The retina remodels and alters the
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Of course the price they pay is that they are sacrificed the minute the experiment is over...
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Nahh they'd just deny it if they could see it, or claim that they could see it all along anyway and everything was going according to plan.
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Especially if you have a rootkit.
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Super vision? (Score:5, Interesting)
Or add a fourth or fifth groups of cones sensitive to different wavelengths of light - UV, etc? If we can capture these extra wavelengths what will our brains do? Ignore or use?
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Neat trick... (Score:2)
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When blind mice start getting visual reflexes then you know they can see again.
(No I dont know if thats how they do it but its a good assumption)
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They placed a mousetrap (this type [matcmadison.edu]) and a plate with cheese, next to each other, and the mouse lived to give us two squeeks.
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Three Spliced Mice (Score:5, Funny)
See how they run, see how they run,
They all ran after the lab tech's wife,
were given new sight with one gene splice,
saw her and ran for the rest of their life.
The three spliced mice.
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(No offense to the lab tech's wives out there. =))
Cultures of Photoreceptor Wannabee's (Score:4, Interesting)
You also have to wonder about type matches. Maybe it's an incorrect analogy, but blood and organ transfusions need to be matched by type. Is the same true here? I wouldn't be surprised if it was.
Just some food for thought in a more serious vein.
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Indeed! I say we offer up tens of millions of our fellow human beings until we too get the cool shit.
Where do I sign?
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Flash a light, show things etc. and observe responses.
This is cool but... (Score:5, Informative)
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Reuters being a popular press outlet, it's understandable that they wouldn't give a quite detailed explanation, but here is a link to the Nature article:
http://ww w.nature.com/news/2006/061106/full/061106-10.html [nature.com]
It's not much better than the Reuters bit, but at least it offers a link to the abstract at the bottom (and the full pdf
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Primary article? (Score:1, Interesting)
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Of course, I may be thinking about this too complexly. Just shine a bright light in his face
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http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19225775.10
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Same thing with mice... they could tell because they responded to visual stimulae. Again, granted the article didn't say that explicitly, but really that should be obvious.
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Use, most likely. There are several explanations for the evolutionary advantage of colorblindness. One explanation is that people who are totally colorblind are better at making out shapes since they don't rely on color. The army uses them for these purposes. However, another explanation is the fact that the mothers of colorblind sons are tetrachromats and capable of seeing in four channels of colors. So at the very least, huma
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They tested the pupillary reflex. This tests the retina, the optic nerve (CN II in humans), the visual cortex, and efferent cranial nerves that control the pupil (oculomotor nerve (CN III) in humans). All of these need to be intact and functioning to have an intact pupillary reflex.
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It's not that tough to judge whether an animal is blind or not. Just expose it to something you know mice would react to visually.
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Barny Google (Score:2, Funny)
Would someone have to walk around looking like this [warriorlibrarian.com] ?
Wouldn't it be cheaper... (Score:1)
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Of course, IANAS, so I don't know what exact process they used, but really, it's not that hard to find out. You could substitute the colors for shapes on the doors or any other visual cue. I mean, they must have had some kind of test to see if they were even blind in the first pla
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because (Score:1)
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Because they no longer bump into every wall they encounter? Because they run like hell when you show them a cat? I don't think you need to be great scientist to be able to tell wether a mouse is blind...
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blind mice? (Score:1)
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another article (Score:1)
Much better article (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/healt
threading is gone? (Score:1)
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70% Redundant
30% Informative
Not "Redundant" when posted in its entirety at 9:45PM.
How did they go blind? (Score:1)
Does anybody know... (Score:2)
Re:Prove it... (Score:2)
Put some food behind a screen?