Vision relies on photoactivation of visual pigments in rod and cone photoreceptor cells of the retina. The human eye structure and the absorption spectra of pigments limit our visual perception of light. Our visual perception is most responsive to stimulating light in the 400-to 720-nm (visible) range. First, we demonstrate by psychophysical experiments that humans can perceive infrared laser emission as visible light. Moreover, we show that mammalian photoreceptors can be directly activated by near infrared light with a sensitivity that paradoxically increases at wavelengths above 900 nm, and display quadratic dependence on laser power, indicating a nonlinear optical process. Biochemical experiments with rhodopsin, cone visual pigments, and a chromophore model compound 11-cis-retinyl-propylamine Schiff base demonstrate the direct isomerization of visual chromophore by a two-photon chromophore isomerization. Indeed, quantum mechanics modeling indicates the feasibility of this mechanism. Together, these findings clearly show that human visual perception of near infrared light occurs by twophoton isomerization of visual pigments.visual pigment | two-photon absorption | rhodopsin | transretinal electrophysiology | multiscale modeling H uman vision is generally believed to be restricted to a visible light range, although >50% of the sun's radiation energy that reaches earth is in the infrared (IR) range (1). Human rod and cone visual pigments with the 11-cis-retinylidene chromophore absorb in the visible range, with absorption monotonically declining from their maxima of 430-560 nm toward longer wavelengths. The spectral sensitivity of human dim light perception matches well with the absorption spectrum of the rod visual pigment, rhodopsin (2, 3). Activation of visual pigments is temperature independent around their absorption peaks (λ max ), but at longer wavelengths, the lower energy photons must be supplemented by heat to achieve chromophore photoisomerization (4). Long wavelength-sensitive visual pigments of vertebrates exhibit maximal absorption at the ∼500-to ∼625-nm range. Pigments with λ max > 700 nm are theoretically possible, but the high noise due to spontaneous thermal activation would render them impractical (5). At human body temperature and with 1,050-nm stimulation, the sensitivity of the peripheral retina to one-photon (1PO) stimulation is less than 10 −12 of its maximum value at 505 nm (4, 6). Indeed, reports about human IR vision can be found in the literature, although they are fragmentary and do not describe the mechanism of this phenomenon.With the invention of radar during World War II, it was immediately questioned if pilots could detect high intensity radiation in the IR range of the spectrum. Wald and colleagues reported that at wavelengths above 800 nm, rod photoreceptors become more sensitive than cones, resulting in perception of IR signals as white light selectively in the peripheral retina (6). They proposed that relative spectral sensitivity declines monotonically toward longer wavele...
High-resolution imaging techniques capable of detecting identifiable endogenous fluorophores in the eye along with genetic testing will dramatically improve diagnostic capabilities in the ophthalmology clinic and accelerate the development of new treatments for blinding diseases. Two-photon excitation (TPE)-based imaging overcomes the filtering of ultraviolet light by the lens of the human eye and thus can be utilized to discover defects in vitamin A metabolism during the regeneration of the visual pigments required for the detection of light. Combining TPE with fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) and spectral analyses offers the potential of detecting diseases of the retina at earlier stages before irreversible structural damage has occurred. The main barriers to realizing the benefits of TPE for imaging the human retina arise from concerns about the high light exposure typically needed for informative TPE imaging and the requirement to correlate the ensuing data with different states of health and disease. To overcome these hurdles, we improved TPE efficiency by controlling temporal properties of the excitation light and employed phasor analyses to FLIM and spectral data in mouse models of retinal diseases. Modeling of retinal photodamage revealed that plasma-mediated effects do not play a role and that melanin-related thermal effects are mitigated by reducing pulse repetition frequency. By using noninvasive TPE imaging we identified molecular components of individual granules in the retinal pigment epithelium and present their analytical characteristics.
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