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1 ents with RP by electrically stimulating the retina.
2 ericyte loss relative to nondiabetic control retina.
3 ve contributions of HC subtypes in the outer retina.
4 1 CNV on the RPE and overlying neurosensory retina.
5 l for the development and maintenance of the retina.
6 with the expected vasculopathy in the inner retina.
7 onophosphate dehydrogenase 1 (IMPDH1) in the retina.
8 the feedforward signals from the degenerated retina.
9 a rare self-limiting condition of the outer retina.
10 etention in the ONL in the injected superior retina.
11 on the excess VEGFA produced by the ischemic retina.
12 , mesencephalon, hindbrain, spinal cord, and retina.
13 nd Xbp1 mRNA splicing in TLR2 knockout mouse retina.
14 urons while also receiving synapses from the retina.
15 ing evolution to have resulted in the duplex retina.
16 one nuclei to the basal side of ONL in mouse retina.
17 ith the morphological expansion of the inner retina.
18 by damage to the small blood vessels in the retina.
19 oncurrent thinning in the outer layer of the retina.
20 rentiation and collagen secretion within the retina.
21 ity differences in the inferior and superior retina.
22 intermediate progenitor state exists in the retina.
23 t in the other eye that lies within affected retina.
24 l maturation, and survival in the cortex and retina.
25 y effective in centering the stimulus on the retina.
26 gher pyruvate kinase activity in db/db mouse retina.
27 he positioning of the electrode array on the retina.
28 ward pathways within the output layer of the retina.
29 sive scar tissue found throughout the neural retina.
30 ent epithelium and occasionally neurosensory retina.
31 ace the desired object image relative to the retina.
32 natural light stimuli projected onto healthy retina.
33 noblastoma is a rare childhood cancer of the retina.
34 l-ventral and central-peripheral axes of the retina.
35 es are active in discrete regions of the rat retina.
36 d prevented photoreceptor neuron loss in the retina.
37 harnessing the regenerative potential of the retina.
38 s expressing specific microRNAs in the mouse retina.
39 4, and rh1 were more prevalent in the dorsal retina.
40 hich may result in longer term damage to the retina.
41 lear how EPO functions to support the neural retina.
42 asol-magnocellular (M pathway) through human retina.
43 rmation of scar tissue on the surface of the retina.
44 as well as in other synapses of the chicken retina.
45 rectly toward the superior nasal paracentral retina.
46 e foveola, the high-resolution region of the retina.
47 rmation of rod photoreceptor synapses in the retina.
48 hat drive phototransduction in the mammalian retina.
49 to the underlying physiology of the primate retina.
50 and function of photoreceptor neurons in the retina.
51 mRNA expression in the developing zebrafish retina.
52 d for capturing the overall structure of the retina.
53 suppressed aberrant angiogenesis in ischemic retina.
54 ss accelerates degenerative processes in the retina.
55 y interact, extravasate and survey the mouse retina.
56 in fixing the number of RGC types in rabbit retina.
57 a uniformity in dendritic density across the retina.
58 n of microRNAs in tissue sections from mouse retinas.
59 in db/db mouse retina compared with control retinas.
60 n organoids and for targeted repair in human retinas.
61 transducing light stimuli to non-functioning retinas.
62 l cell adhesion, is mislocalized in Sac1(ts) retinas.
63 ninvasive monitoring of vascular function in retinas.
64 ajor issue in the field of stem cell-derived retinas.
65 e function of human versus non-human primate retinas.
66 enriched class of genes in Rbfox2-deficient retinas.
68 In the cortex (e.g. [2-4]), and even the retina [5], of primates, cells are found that respond se
69 protein which was initially described in the retina, although it is also present in other tissues.
70 LTB(4), preventing structural damage to the retina and a significantly reducing effector T helper 17
76 , the pseudostratified neuroepithelia of the retina and cerebrocortical ventricular zones provide a p
77 hanges in both the peripapillary and macular retina and changes in vascular parameters have been iden
79 re weighted and combined at the level of the retina and how this combined signal is transformed into
81 (A) receptor is prominently expressed in the retina and is present at lower levels in several brain r
82 evelopment and regeneration mechanism of the retina and may offer a new way for maintaining and regen
83 l activation was more robust in the inferior retina and modulated across the boundary of light damage
86 pon change in numerousness; in contrast, the retina and optic tectum responded mainly to changes in s
87 om dorsotemporal to ventrolateral across the retina and overlapping with the mouse binocular field of
88 fore, the image projection occurring between retina and primary visual cortex can be mathematically d
89 identify an inhibitory RGC population in the retina and provide a circuit-level mechanism that contri
90 used to image the vascular structure of the retina and requires the insertion of an exogenous dye wi
93 on enhances Nrf2 DNA-binding activity in the retina and that the suppressive effect of diabetes on Nr
94 individual layers of microvasculature of the retina and the choroid by comparing consecutive B-scans.
95 dependent changes of the CV2 location in the retina and the existence of an endothelial population wi
99 ations for both signal processing within the retina and therapeutic interventions for blinding condit
100 nes of the skate eye and the location of the retina and this enabled us to reconstruct how photorecep
102 tmortem samples of human cerebral cortex and retina and were able to identify transcripts, including
103 diameter determines how much light hits the retina and, thus, how much information is available for
105 ciated genes was cell-type-specific in adult retina, and cell-type specificity was retained in organo
106 r, ECS alpha has never been measured in live retina, and little is known about how ECS alpha varies f
107 acrine cells during development and in adult retinas, and it is present in both GABAergic and glycine
110 clarify whether visual inputs to the intact retina are necessary for the LPZ responses, here, we mea
112 ve ganglion cells (ooDSGCs) in the mammalian retina are typically thought to signal local motion to t
113 tively using an ex vivo configuration, where retinas are isolated and transretinal photovoltages are
114 d transmit photoreceptor output to the inner retina, are among the first cells affected by diabetic c
115 e diseases has emerged with the neurosensory retina as a unique window into deeper brain tissues.
116 q analysis on 16 time points from developing retina as well as four early stages of retinal organoid
117 with early or intermediate AMD have thinner retinas as compared to eyes from the Chr1-risk group wit
119 s the potential of detecting diseases of the retina at earlier stages before irreversible structural
120 VI was lower in the inferior versus superior retina at matching eccentricities and a significant diff
121 obins that allow O(2) to be delivered to the retina at PO(2)s more than ten-fold that of arterial blo
122 CTA en face images were generated using the "retina," "avascular," "choriocapillaris," and "outer ret
124 variety of noninvasive measurements in skin, retina, brain, and sublingual tissue, as well as plasma
125 r cells are tightly connected throughout the retina, but that spatial resolution is lost at the level
126 We have approached this problem in mouse retina by analysing the kinetic differences between rod
127 gic features (melanoma, 8720-8790) and site (retina, C69.2; choroid, C69.3; and ciliary body, C69.4)
128 ces in different layers and locations of the retina can explain the patterns of retinal hemorrhage (R
129 and neuroprotective role of VEGF, albeit in retina, cellular mechanisms underlying the VEGF neuropro
130 ma(-) memory T-helper 17 (Th17) cells in the retina, cervical lymph nodes, inguinal lymph nodes, and
136 eceptor CREs from wild-type and mutant mouse retinas, defined by presence or absence, respectively, o
137 ysis of eight different mosaics in the mouse retina, demonstrating conspicuous variability in the deg
140 ve photoreceptor degeneration in the central retina, disease progression involves epigenetic changes
142 lso altered vascular patterning in the mouse retina during development when delivered exogenously.
146 ent to spontaneously polarise the developing retina, establishing the first organisational axis of th
155 optimized for disease analysis, to study the retina from a 48-y-old woman suffering from MacTel.
156 sretinal signaling only occurs in the murine retina from Ca(v)2.3 competent mice, supporting the idea
157 s prior to light insult remarkably protected retina from deterioration and preserved its function.
158 f LncRNA MALAT1 has potential to protect the retina from oxidative damage and to prevent or slow down
159 We performed immunohistochemistry using retinas from Bardet-Biedl Syndrome (BBS) mouse models an
162 everal structures (i.e., optic disc, macula, retina, globe, lens, ciliary body) correlated with clini
164 intraocular gas bubble and contact with the retina has been evaluated in different head positions in
166 g visual pigment kinetics across the central retina, high fidelity IRD provides a unique insight into
169 light exposure eliminates PRs in the central retina in 1 week, but interneurons and their synapses ar
171 sidering the demonstrated implication of the retina in Parkinson disease (PD) pathology and the impor
172 current study confirms the plasticity of the retina in response to the natural photic conditions.
173 generating spatiotemporal maps of the entire retina in the cpfl1 mouse model for primary cone degener
174 utein from zeaxanthin in images of the human retina in vivo or in donor eye tissues has been challeng
176 ct non-BCs to the same extent in bipolarless retinas, indicating that AII ACs establish partner-type-
178 imarily affects the oxygenation of the inner retina involved in signal processing and transduction, a
179 ouse retina.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The mouse retina is a leading model for analyzing the development,
180 gh the presence of cotton wool appearance in retina is a nonspecific sign it needs to be properly eva
181 types of neurons as the architecture of the retina is assembled, and the distinct mechanisms by whic
184 ecorded as an ERG from the superfused murine retina isolated from wildtype and Ca(v)2.3-deficient mic
187 d in pigmented glial cells of the Drosophila retina leads to age-related degeneration of both glia an
188 t antioxidant that has shown efficacy in the retina light damage mouse model and in humans for multip
189 f the cellular architecture of the mammalian retina, little is known about the organization and dynam
191 in three regions of the human visual system (retina, macula, and retinal pigment epithelium/choroid)
192 ions of lutein and zeaxanthin in human donor retinas mapped with confocal resonance Raman microscopy.
193 -infrared light sensitivity in a blind human retina may supplement or restore visual function in pati
194 tinal ganglion cell (RGC) types in the mouse retina mediate pattern vision by responding to specific
196 e, we report that during colonization of the retina, microglia contacts the deep layer of high stiffn
197 IPANTS: Randomized clinical trial at 39 DRCR Retina Network sites in the US and Canada including 205
199 for segmented features such as neurosensory retina (NSR), drusen, intraretinal fluid (IRF), subretin
200 g dataset measurements of immunofluorescence retina nuclear layers disclosed no significant differenc
202 r of different photoreceptors present in the retina of G. australis and whether each cell type expres
204 ken together, these results suggest that the retina of H. portusjacksoni is well adapted for nocturna
206 generation, has been linked to a loss in the retina of Muller glial cells and the amino acid serine,
213 and rh1) were uniformly expressed across the retina of the common sole but, in the Senegalese sole, s
218 -scale multi-electrode array recordings from retinas of treatment-naive patients who underwent enucle
219 n stimulate pSmad3 expression in the injured retina, only Tgfb3 inhibits injury-dependent MG prolifer
221 hours from 3 academic nonhospital-associated retina-only private practice institutions over a 2-year
222 temporally incident light rays to the nasal retina pass anterior to the IOL and some are refracted p
224 ients with diabetes from a tertiary academic retina practice and obtained 3-mm x 3-mm macular OCTA sc
225 were gathered on all patients from multiple retina practices in the United States with RRD in 2015 a
226 were similar throughout all 3 layers of the retina (preretinal, intraretinal, and subretinal layers)
229 ents in the cone photoreceptors of the mouse retina provides an excellent model to address this quest
230 ers (24.0%) and shorter follow-up times to a retina rather than a nonretina clinic for 52 of 151 pati
231 with the risk of cataract, and the volume of retina receiving 52 Gy was associated with the risk of r
234 which parallel OFF channels generated in the retina remain segregated across three stages of visual p
237 in transcripts expressed in the N. oerstedii retina reveals the potential for previously undocumented
240 l understanding of vertebrate vision and the retina's computational purpose, it is therefore importan
243 he optic disc, whereas others perforated the retina, separating photoreceptors from the retinal pigme
244 types and nearly 140 cell types in the mouse retina.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The mouse retina is a lead
245 e may contribute to visual processing in the retina.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The volume fraction of the
251 months of age, suggesting intervention with retina-specific CLN2 gene therapy should occur ideally b
254 to be about the same in wild type and mutant retinas, suggesting that the mutant protein is expressed
255 ), consisting of the brain, spinal cord, and retina, superintends to the acquisition, integration and
258 the gas bubble and the inferior and anterior retina than prone positioning even when the gas fill is
260 terial and venous blood flow patterns in the retina that may facilitate research into disease pathoph
261 eas derived from previous work in the bovine retina that R-type Ca(2+) channels are involved in shapi
262 report on an identified synapse in the mouse retina, the cone photoreceptor type 4 bipolar cell (BC4)
266 ad their processes across the surface of the retina to achieve a degree of dendritic coverage that is
268 "avascular," "choriocapillaris," and "outer retina to choriocapillaris (ORCC)" slabs automatically p
269 tional and optogenetic analyses of the mouse retina to discover that surround inhibition of the AII d
270 pendent processes in both the RPE and neural retina to ensure adequate 11-cis-retinal production unde
271 ield flicker stimulus was presented onto the retina to induce a vascular response to neural activity.
272 from destruction of the peripheral avascular retina to inhibit angiogenic stimuli to anti-VEGF agents
273 uch candidates, we used the laminated murine retina to screen 92 lacZ reporter lines available throug
275 ry of the mouse, describing projections from retina to thalamus, between thalamus and cortex, and wit
277 photoreceptors at the rim of the hemispheric retina, topological defects, called "Y-Junctions", form
281 ascular cells in the brain, autophagy in the retina, viral gene delivery, and chemical diffusion thro
282 d atrophic holes within peripheral avascular retina, visible vitreous condensation ridge-like interfa
284 ceptor density in 2-month old pomgnt1 mutant retina was similar to the wild-type animals but was sign
288 Using human retinal organoids and mouse retina, we observed that a similar actin dynamics-driven
289 ng serial electron microscopy in the macaque retina, we reconstructed the neurons and synapses of the
291 er to maintain hemodynamic regulation in the retina when exposed to visual stimulation, in our case f
292 re are 30-50 types of ganglion cell in mouse retina, whereas only a few years ago it was still writte
293 ntage of a compact circuit in the vertebrate retina, whereby the AII amacrine cell (AII AC) provides
294 have a specific spatial distribution in the retina, which is potentially associated with changes in
295 izontal cells (HCs) are neurons of the outer retina, which provide inhibitory feedback onto photorece
297 ral occlusion produced severe damage to both retinas, while unilateral occlusion produced damage main
298 l role in vision by focusing light on to the retina with loss of lens transparency leading to impairm
299 we made use of the genetically tractable fly retina, with a focus on the mechanisms that coordinate m
300 ly altered by the loss of TRPM1 in the adult retina, with significantly less dendritic and axon termi