MCD BIO 90 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Retinitis Pigmentosa, Stem-Cell Therapy, Macular Degeneration

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The retina is the back of your eye where the light hits (specifically in the macula, or the blind spot). It sends signals through your optic nerves and through your brain of what you see. Inside the retina, there are cones and rods. The cones are for colour vision and for intense light. Rods and cones come from retinal progenitor cells. The cornea is the protective layer and window, as it controls the entrance of light. The iris is the color of your eye and it either constricts or dilates your eye to be able to focus. The choroid provides nourishment and oxygen to the outer layers of the retina. The sclera holds your eye"s structure and protects it. The ciliary muscles alters the curvature of your lens, making it more or less concave/convex, to be able to focus. Fluorosentitive retinal ganglion cells is a type of neuron located near the inner surface of the retina.

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