Sight depends on the many different cell types of the eye's retina all functioning correctly in the right place. The photoreceptor cells (PRC) that respond to the light and transduce that response to the brain are constantly being degraded and renewed. Ingestion of the degraded material is managed by the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), normally in close contact with PRC. This study now shows that RPE continue to perform their function in eye diseases where PRC and RPE are separated, thanks to the ability of RPE to reach out pseudopodia (membrane extensions) across that gap. Shown is a 3D reconstruction of an RPE pseudopod (light green) bridging the expanded sub-retinal space in a mouse model of a retinal degenerative disease.
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