Abstract

Inflammation is an umbrella feature of ageing. It is present in the aged retina and many retinal diseases including age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In ageing and in AMD mitochondrial function declines. In normal ageing this can be manipulated by brief exposure to 670 nm light on the retina, which increases mitochondrial membrane potential and reduces inflammation. Here we ask if 670 nm exposure has the same ability in an aged mouse model of AMD, the complement factor H knockout (CFH−/−) where inflammation is a key feature. Further, we ask whether this occurs when 670 nm is delivered briefly in environmental lighting rather than directly focussed on the retina. Mice were exposed to 670 nm for 6 minutes twice a day for 14 days in the form of supplemented environmental light. Exposed animals had significant increase in cytochrome c oxidase (COX), which is a mitochondrial enzyme regulating oxidative phosphorylation.There was a significant reduction in complement component C3, an inflammatory marker in the outer retina. Vimetin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expression, which reflect retinal stress in Muller glia, were also significantly down regulated. There were also significant changes in outer retinal macrophage morphology. However, amyloid beta (Aβ) load, which also increases with age in the outer retina and is pro-inflammatory, did not change. Hence, 670 nm is effective in reducing inflammation probably via COX activation in mice with a genotype similar to that in 50% of AMD patients even when brief exposures are delivered via environmental lighting. Further, inflammation can be reduced independent of Aβ. The efficacy revealed here supports current early stage clinical trials of 670 nm in AMD patients.

Highlights

  • Progressive ageing is associated with systemic inflammation [1,2,3]

  • 670 nm Treatment Significantly Elevates c oxidase (COX) Expression COX is an enzyme in the mitochondrial respiratory chain which functions as a photoacceptor molecule activated by long wavelengths [18,25,31,32]

  • COX immunostaining was present in both groups and was largely confined to mitochondrial rich regions, including photoreceptor inner segments and the outer plexiform layer (Figure 3A–D)

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Summary

Introduction

Progressive ageing is associated with systemic inflammation [1,2,3] This is marked in tissues with high metabolic demand such as the retina that suffers from progressive oxidative stress [4,5,6]. This is partly driven by excess extra-cellular deposition along an ageing Bruch’s membrane, where inflammation becomes a key feature, even in the absence of pathology [2,7]. It is critical in many retinal diseases [5,10,11]

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