Jump to content

Eye color: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
AED (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Slide424 (talk | contribs)
Line 31: Line 31:
===Grey eyes===
===Grey eyes===
[[Image:Iris.eye.225px.jpg|thumb|right|A grey eye with a copper-colored ring around the pupil]]
[[Image:Iris.eye.225px.jpg|thumb|right|A grey eye with a copper-colored ring around the pupil]]
[[Image:greyeyes.jpg|thumb|right]]

Grey eyes are (an often lighter) variant of blue eyes. A wide variety of shades of grey exist, from the almost white (light grey) to dark.
Grey eyes are (an often lighter) variant of blue eyes. A wide variety of shades of grey exist, from the almost white (light grey) to dark.



Revision as of 13:10, 11 May 2006

Eye color is a polygenic trait and is determined by the amount and type of pigments present in the eye's iris[1][2]. Although there seem to be three genotypic eye colors (brown, green, and blue), humans and other animals have many phenotypic variations in eye color[3]. These variations in color are attributed to varying ratios of eumelanin and pheomelanin melanocytes in the iris[2].

Colors

They have branches of color such as blue is also associated with grey, violet, blue-grey, blue-green, violet, and even red. Green is associated with hazel and blue-green and brown is associated with black and hazel eye color. Eye color is also associated with ethnicity/race and is genetically associated with hair color.

Brown eyes

File:Browneyedgirl01.jpg
Brown eyes

The vast majority of the world's people have dark eyes, ranging from brown to nearly black. Light brown eyes are also present in many people, but to a lesser extent. Most of the original inhabitants of Africa, Asia, and the Americas have brown eyes. Brown eyes are also found in Europe, Oceania and North America, though within European populations they are not predominant to the same extent. Brown had been considered to be the most dominant eye color in any gene, but new studies have revealed that this is not always true.

Black eyes

Black eyes

People with very dark brown irises may appear to have black eyes. This is fairly common in people of African, Asian and, Native American descent.

Hazel eyes

File:Hazel eyes.JPG
An example of hazel eyes

Hazel is usually used to describe eyes that contain elements of both green eyes and brown eyes, sometimes transitioning from green at the edges to brown around the pupil. This should not be confused with irises that display a brown, yellow, or copper-colored ring around the pupil, as in the grey iris shown below. Hazel eyes are also known as light brown eyes. They are dominant (not including other continents) in middle European countries such as the middle of Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, south and middle of Poland, south and middle of Germany, north of France, Switzerland, north of Italy, Slovenia and others. This color of eyes is more dominant than yellow and green colors.

Amber eyes

Amber eyes of a German female

Amber eyes are often mistakenly referred to as "hazel." They have, however, a much stronger yellowish/golden and russet/coppery tint mixed with a lighter green than do hazel eyes and are not as common in humans. The greenish yellow tint appears at its brightest in direct day- and sunlight but turns into a darker yellowish green in the shade or a coppery brown in candlelight. Amber eyes are also nick-named "cat eyes."

Blue eyes

Vibrant blue eyes are relatively common throughout Europe, especially in Northern Europe, including the northern Baltics and in East Central Europe.

Among human phenotypes, blue eyes are a relatively rare eye color. They are found mainly in people of northern European and eastern European descent, and to a lesser extent, in people of southern Europe, the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia. South Asians may also have blue eyes, but this is uncommon, except amongst Pathans and Parsis in Pakistan, Gujarat, Rajasthan, in Kashmir and Punjab. Finland has the highest percentage of blue-eyed people. Although very rare, there are instances of blue eyes occuring in people of African descent.[citation needed] Many Caucasian babies are born with blue eyes, though their eyes will darken, or change color. Most infants' eye color will set within a couple of days to a couple of weeks, though some people's will continue to change for a number of years.

Blue is the colour of the indole monomer that when polymerised forms melanin.[citation needed] . If both alleles for brown eyes (a polymerase gene) are absent or damaged, the blue colour remains. Hence blue eye colour is a recessive trait.

In the mid-20th century after the dawn of color films, blue eyes were considered very desirable in those aspiring to be Hollywood actors and actresses. This became less true toward the latter half of that century.

A 2002 study found the prevalence of blue eye color among non-Hispanic whites in the United States to be 57.4% for those born between 1899 and 1905 compared to 33.8% for those born between 1936 and 1951[4].

Grey eyes

A grey eye with a copper-colored ring around the pupil

Grey eyes are (an often lighter) variant of blue eyes. A wide variety of shades of grey exist, from the almost white (light grey) to dark.

The underlying grey color may be tinted with various other colors, as in the greenish-grey eyes in the picture. "Steel blue" eyes are also found, ranging from a slightly desaturated blue to light blue-grey.

A yellow-, amber- or copper-colored ring is commonly seen around the pupil. This is a normal part of the iris, and should not be confused with Kayser-Fleischer rings. As with other colors, grey eyes are often seen to change color depending on the surrounding colors.

Green eyes

Green eyes

Green eyes are rarer than brown, black, hazel and blue eyes. Green eyes are most often found in people of Celtic, Germanic, and Slavic descent. Hungarians have the highest percentage of green eyes of any population, close to 20%.[citation needed] Interestingly, green eyes are also found, though in far lower proportions, from the Middle East to southern Asia. They are so common among Pashtuns that in Pakistan, Pashtuns are often called "Hare Ankheian Vaale": the green-eyed people.[citation needed]

One of the most famous photographs ever published by National Geographic was a close-up of Sharbat Gula, a Pashtun girl with startling green eyes, taken in western Afghanistan by Steve McCurry in 1984. Details of her irises captured by the photograph were used to confirm her identity after she was relocated in 2002.

Blue-Green eyes

File:Blue-green-eyes.jpg
Blue-green eyes, here with a yellow ring around the pupil, may appear to change color

A variant of blue eyes, blue-green eyes are quite rare and usually consist of an iris with a predominantly blue color, usually darker blue, with green streaks or stippling caused by a yellow- or copper-colored overlay. Yellow-, amber-, or copper-colored rings are often present around the pupil.

The exact color is often perceived to vary according to its surroundings. Wearing lighter blue colors or getting tanned tends to emphasize the blue components. Wearing bright red, green, and shades of yellow or brown can emphasize green components, or even give the impression of grey.

Violet Eyes

Violet eyes are extremely rare and are a variation of blue eyes. They are believed to be caused by eyes having so little pigmentation that the red and blue blood vessels permeate through, causing a violet color of the iris. A noteworthy subject is Elizabeth Taylor, whose physical trademark is her violet eyes.

Red eyes

In animals (including humans) who have albinism, the irises may appear red due to a lack of any pigment — the iris takes on the color of the blood. The general genes for albinism affect eye color, and there are some more localized color genes as well, such as ocular albinism.

The red-eye effect commonly appears in photographs taken with a flash, especially in those with light eyes.

Heterochromia

Heterochromia (also known as a heterochromia iridis or heterochromia iridium) is an ocular condition in which one iris is a different color from the other iris (complete heterochromia), or where the part of one iris is a different color from the remainder (partial heterochromia or sectoral heterochromia). This uncommon condition usually results due to uneven melanin content. A number of causes are responsible, including genetics and Waardenburg syndrome. Trauma and certain medications can also cause increased or decreased pigmentation in one eye. Rock star David Bowie is said to have heterochromia iridium, apparently due to an eye injury incurred in his youth (in fact, he has his pupil permanently dilated, which makes the injured eye lose pigment and therefore appear green). Gracie Allen had two eyes of startlingly different colors, which some believe influenced her decision to to stop acting when color television was widely adopted. Actors Joe Pesci and Wentworth Miller and actresses Mila Kunis and Kate Bosworth also have different colored eyes. The French scientist Louis Pasteur, who proved the germ theory of disease, is also known to have had a green and a blue eye. On occasion the condition of having two different colored eyes is caused by blood staining the iris after sustaining injury.

Genetics

At one time scientists thought that a single gene pair, in a dominant/recessive inheritance pattern, controlled human eye color. The allele for brown eyes was considered dominant over the allele for blue eyes. The genetic basis for eye color is actually far more complex. At the present, three gene pairs controlling human eye color are known. Two of the gene pairs occur on chromosome pair 15 and one occurs on chromosome pair 19. The bey 2 gene, on chromosome 15, has a brown and a blue allele. A second gene, located on chromosome 19 (the gey gene) has a blue and a green allele. A third gene, bey 1, located on chromosome 15, is a central brown eye color gene.

Geneticists have designed a model using the bey 2 and gey gene pairs that explains the inheritance of blue, green and brown eyes. In this model the bey 2 gene has a brown and a blue allele. The brown allele is always dominant over the blue allele so even if a person is heterozygous (one brown and one blue allele) for the bey 2 gene on chromosome 15 the brown allele will be expressed. The gey gene also has two alleles, one green and one blue. The green allele is dominant to the blue allele on either chromosome but is recessive to the brown allele on chromosome 15. This means that there is a dominance order among the two gene pairs. If a person has a brown allele on chromosome 15 and all other alleles are blue or green the person will have brown eyes. If there is a green allele on chromosome 19 and the rest of the alleles are blue, eye color will be green. Blue eyes will occur only if all four alleles are for blue eyes. This model explains the inheritance of blue, brown and green eyes but cannot account for gray, hazel or multiple shades of brown, blue, green and gray eyes. It cannot explain how two blue-eyed parents can produce a brown-eyed child or how eye color can change over time. This suggests that there are other genes, yet to be discovered, that determine eye color or that modify the expression of the known eye color genes.

Eye color typically stabilizes by 6 years of age[5].

Medical implications

Those with lighter iris color have been found to have a higher prevalence of age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) than those with darker iris color[6]; lighter eye color is also associated with an increased risk of ARMD progression[7]. An increased risk of uveal melanoma has been found in those with blue or grey iris color[8]. Darker iris colors have been found to have slightly higher intraocular pressures than lighter iris colors [9]. An increased incidence of age-related cataracts has been found in those with dark brown irises[10][11].

References

  1. ^ Wielgus AR, Sarna T. "Melanin in human irides of different color and age of donors." Pigment Cell Res. 2005 Dec;18(6):454-64. PMID 16280011.
  2. ^ a b Prota G, Hu DN, Vincensi MR, McCormick SA, Napolitano A. "Characterization of melanins in human irides and cultured uveal melanocytes from eyes of different colors." Exp Eye Res. 1998 Sep;67(3):293-9. PMID 9778410.
  3. ^ Morris, PJ. "Phenotypes and Genotypes for human eye colors." Athro Limited website. Retrieved May 10, 2006.
  4. ^ Grant MD, Lauderdale DS. "Cohort effects in a genetically determined trait: eye colour among US whites." Ann Hum Biol. 2002 Nov-Dec;29(6):657-66. PMID 12573082.
  5. ^ Bito LZ, Matheny A, Cruickshanks KJ, Nondahl DM, Carino OB. "Eye color changes past early childhood. The Louisville Twin Study." Arch Ophthalmol. 1997 May;115(5):659-63. PMID 9152135.
  6. ^ Frank RN, Puklin JE, Stock C, Canter LA. "Race, iris color, and age-related macular degeneration." Trans Am Ophthalmol Soc. 2000;98:109-15; discussion 115-7. PMID 11190014.
  7. ^ Nicolas CM, Robman LD, Tikellis G, Dimitrov PN, Dowrick A, Guymer RH, McCarty CA. "Iris colour, ethnic origin and progression of age-related macular degeneration." Clin Experiment Ophthalmol. 2003 Dec;31(6):465-9. PMID 14641151.
  8. ^ Stang A, Ahrens W, Anastassiou G, Jockel KH. "Phenotypical characteristics, lifestyle, social class and uveal melanoma." Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 2003 Dec;10(5):293-302. PMID 14566630.
  9. ^ Mitchell R, Rochtchina E, Lee A, Wang JJ, Mitchell P; Blue Mountains Eye Study. "Iris color and intraocular pressure: the Blue Mountains Eye Study." Am J Ophthalmol. 2003 Mar;135(3):384-6. PMID 12614760.
  10. ^ Younan C, Mitchell P, Cumming RG, Rochtchina E, Wang JJ. "Iris color and incident cataract and cataract surgery: the Blue Mountains Eye Study." Am J Ophthalmol. 2002 Aug;134(2):273-4. PMID 12140040.
  11. ^ Hammond BR Jr, Nanez JE, Fair C, Snodderly DM. "Iris color and age-related changes in lens optical density." Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2000 Sep;20(5):381-6. PMID 11045246.