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Achromatopsia-Visual Cortex Stability and Plasticity in the Absence of Functional Cones

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posted on 2023-11-10, 09:42 authored by Barbara Molz, Anne Herbik, Heidi A Baseler, Peter de Best, Noa Raz, Andre Gouws, Khazar Ahmadi, Rebecca Lowndes, Rebecca J McLean, Irene Gottlob, Susanne Kohl, Lars Choritz, John Maguire, Martin Kanowski, Barbara Käsmann-Kellner, Ilse Wieland, Eyal Banin, Netta Levin, Antony B Morland, Michael B Hoffmann

Purpose

Achromatopsia is a rare inherited disorder rendering retinal cone photoreceptors nonfunctional. As a consequence, the sizable foveal representation in the visual cortex is congenitally deprived of visual input, which prompts a fundamental question: is the cortical representation of the central visual field in patients with achromatopsia remapped to take up processing of paracentral inputs? Such remapping might interfere with gene therapeutic treatments aimed at restoring cone function.

Methods

We conducted a multicenter study to explore the nature and plasticity of vision in the absence of functional cones in a cohort of 17 individuals affected by autosomal recessive achromatopsia and confirmed biallelic disease-causing CNGA3 or CNGB3 mutations. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis of foveal remapping in human achromatopsia. For this purpose, we applied two independent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)-based mapping approaches, i.e. conventional phase-encoded eccentricity and population receptive field mapping, to separate data sets.

Results

Both fMRI approaches produced the same result in the group comparison of achromatopsia versus healthy controls: sizable remapping of the representation of the central visual field in the primary visual cortex was not apparent.

Conclusions

Remapping of the cortical representation of the central visual field is not a general feature in achromatopsia. It is concluded that plasticity of the human primary visual cortex is less pronounced than previously assumed. A pretherapeutic imaging workup is proposed to optimize interventions.

History

Author affiliation

School of Psychology and Vision Science, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Investigative ophthalmology & visual science

Volume

64

Issue

13

Pagination

23

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

issn

0146-0404

eissn

1552-5783

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-11-10

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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