Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Vision and visual plasticity in ageing mice.
- Journal:
- Restorative neurology and neuroscience
- Year:
- 2012
- Authors:
- Lehmann, Konrad et al.
- Affiliation:
- Institut fü · Germany
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
PURPOSE: Little is known about neuronal changes during ageing in the visual system of mice which are increasingly being used as animal models for human visual disorders. METHODS AND RESULTS: Measuring the optomotor response to moving gratings, visual acuity of C57BL/6-mice was 0.39 cycles/degree (cyc/deg) until 12 months of age and declined to 0.27 cyc/deg (by 30%) at 26 months. In the visual water task, a cortex-dependent task based on visual discrimination learning, visual acuity remained stable at 0.58 cyc/deg up to 21 months and then declined to 0.48 cyc/deg (by 19%) at 27 months. Visual cortical activity recorded by optical imaging declined by 33% between seven and 23 months of age. After monocular deprivation and daily testing of the optomotor response, visual acuity of the open eye increased by 29% in 4 to 7-month-old animals, while the increase was only 13% in 23-month-old mice. Interestingly, interindividual variability generally increased with age, so that some 23-month-old mice retained visual acuity and interocular plasticity like 4 or 7-month-old animals. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, reduced visual function was accompanied by a reduction of both visual cortical responses and interocular plasticity indicating a central nervous system component in age-related vision loss in mice.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22348872/