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1 Biology Department, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: grant.balkema.1{at}bc.edu.
Abundant evidence spanning 25 years demonstrates that hypopigmentation is associated with sensory abnormalities, manifested most clearly as elevated absolute dark-adapted thresholds in hypopigmented mice. Here we show that when ocular melanin is increased in the himalayan mouse via
-Melanocyte Stimulating Hormone (
-MSH) injections, dark-adapted thresholds drop in proportion to the change in ocular melanin. We further measured free calcium concentration with calcium sensitive microelectrodes in both albino and black mouse retinal eyecups in living subjects. The recordings were done in anesthetized animals, as the defect is not present in isolated retinas or in the superfused eye preparation. A double-barreled electrode-- pCa and Vref-- was used to simultaneously record the calcium concentration and the ERG at each of many depths as the electrode was driven through the retina. The position of the electrode was confirmed with ERG and DiI electrode tract reconstruction. Dark-adapted albinos (n=6) had 1.4 (+/- 0.015) mM calcium in the sub-retinal space compared with 0.80 (+/- 0.025) mM in black mice (n=6). The results of these experiments are consistent with the hypothesis that the ocular hypopigmentation causes elevated calcium levels in the sub-retinal space that in turn mimic light adaptation in hypopigmented mice.
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