Abstract

Albino and pigmented (black-hooded) rats of the Sprague-Dawley and Long Evans strains, respectively, were compared in terms of their susceptibility to retinal damage by ultraviolet-A light. Anesthetized animals were exposed to ultraviolet-A light ( λ max = 360 nm) for 4 hr and retinal damage was assessed 1 week later by electroretinographic analysis and measurement of outer nuclear layer thickness. Albino and pigmented animals showed approximately the same severity of ultraviolet-A retinal damage as a function of exposure irradiance. Furthermore, both pigmentation strains showed swelling and vesiculation of rod inner segment mitochondria as an early manifestation of damage. An abbreviated study on a congenic rat strain (F344- c/+) of albino and pigmented littermates again demonstrated an equal susceptibility to ultraviolet-A phototoxicity for both pigmentation phenotypes. These findings provide evidence that melanin is not the mediator of short-wavelength phototoxicity to the retina, since damage readily occurred in albino animals completely lacking this chromophore.

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