Abstract

Photophobia may arise from various causes and frequently accompanies numerous ocular diseases. In modern highly illuminated world, complaints about greater photosensitivity to blue light increasingly appear. However, the pathophysiology of photophobia is still debated. In the present work, we investigated in vivo the role of various neural pathways potentially implicated in blue-light aversion. Moreover, we studied the light-induced neuroinflammatory processes on the ocular surface and in the trigeminal pathways. Adult male C57BL/6J mice were exposed either to blue (400–500 nm) or to yellow (530–710 nm) LED light (3 h, 6 mW/cm2). Photosensitivity was measured as the time spent in dark or illuminated parts of the cage. Pharmacological treatments were applied: topical instillation of atropine, pilocarpine or oxybuprocaine, intravitreal injection of lidocaine, norepinephrine or “blocker” of the visual photoreceptor transmission, and intraperitoneal injection of a melanopsin antagonist. Clinical evaluations (ocular surface state, corneal mechanical sensitivity and tear quantity) were performed directly after exposure to light and after 3 days of recovery in standard light conditions. Trigeminal ganglia (TGs), brainstems and retinas were dissected out and conditioned for analyses. Mice demonstrated strong aversion to blue but not to yellow light. The only drug that significantly decreased the blue-light aversion was the intraperitoneally injected melanopsin antagonist. After blue-light exposure, dry-eye-related inflammatory signs were observed, notably after 3 days of recovery. In the retina, we observed the increased immunoreactivity for GFAP, ATF3, and Iba1; these data were corroborated by RT-qPCR. Moreover, retinal visual and non-visual photopigments distribution was altered. In the trigeminal pathway, we detected the increased mRNA expression of cFOS and ATF3 as well as alterations in cytokines’ levels. Thus, the wavelength-dependent light aversion was mainly mediated by melanopsin-containing cells, most likely in the retina. Other potential pathways of light reception were also discussed. The phototoxic message was transmitted to the trigeminal system, inducing both inflammation at the ocular surface and stress in the retina. Further investigations of retina-TG connections are needed.

Highlights

  • Photophobia is a highly debilitating sensory disturbance provoked by visible light (Wu and Hallett, 2017)

  • Blue Light Aversion Is Accompanied by Inflammation in the Lacrimal Functional Unit

  • We investigated in vivo the origins and effects of spectrum-dependent photophobia by means of behavioral and pharmacological studies in mice exposed to blue or yellow light

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Summary

Introduction

Photophobia is a highly debilitating sensory disturbance provoked by visible light (Wu and Hallett, 2017). In patients exposed to normally non-painful illumination, this syndrome causes discomfort and pain in the eye (Digre and Brennan, 2012). One of the most common neurologic disorders that causes photophobia is migraine; as much as 80% of migraineurs heavily suffer from increased light sensitivity (Albilali and Dilli, 2018). Photophobia in general and greater sensitivity to blue light in particular are common for many ophthalmological (dry eye, blepharitis, retinal dystrophy), neurological (blepharospasm, traumatic brain injury) and even psychiatric (depression, anxiety) disorders (Digre and Brennan, 2012). There have been no major randomized control trials for photophobia management (Albilali and Dilli, 2018). Ubiquitous presence of artificial light sources highly emitting in blue spectrum complicates the situation (Lupis, 2017; Text Request, 2017)

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