| Literature DB >> 22701184 |
Cassandra Peoples1, Victoria E Shaw, Jonathan Stone, Glen Jeffery, Gary E Baker, John Mitrofanis.
Abstract
We examined whether near-infrared light (NIr) treatment (photobiomodulation) saves dopaminergic amacrine cells of the retina in an acute and a chronic 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model of Parkinson disease. For the acute model, BALB/c mice had MPTP (100 mg/kg) or saline injections over 30 hours, followed by a six-day-survival period. For the chronic model, mice had MPTP (200 mg/kg) or saline injections over five weeks, followed by a three-week-survival period. NIr treatment was applied either at the same time (simultaneous series) or well after (posttreatment series) the MPTP insult. There were four groups within each series: Saline, Saline-NIr, MPTP, and MPTP-NIr. Retinae were processed for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunochemistry, and cell number was analysed. In the MPTP groups, there was a significant reduction in TH(+) cell number compared to the saline controls; this reduction was greater in the acute (~50%) compared to the chronic (~30%) cases. In the MPTP-NIr groups, there were significantly more TH(+) cells than in the MPTP groups of both series (~30%). In summary, we showed that NIr treatment was able to both protect (simultaneous series) and rescue (posttreatment series) TH(+) cells of the retina from parkinsonian insult.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22701184 PMCID: PMC3369478 DOI: 10.5402/2012/850150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Neurol ISSN: 2090-5505
Figure 1Outline of the different experimental groups used in this study, namely: Saline, Saline-NIr, MPTP, and MPTP-NIr, in either the simultaneous (a) or posttreatment (b) series of the acute and chronic models. Photomicrographs of TH+ amacrine cells in retinal wholemounts of the superior temporal region (c) and of the retinal edges ((d), (e)). The latter reveals the location of the TH+ somata and dendrites within the different layers. Most TH+ somata were located in the inner layers of the inner nuclear layer (c); very few were located in the ganglion cell layer (e). All images from Saline group of Ac-Sim case. Scale bars = 100 μm.
Figure 2Graphs showing (a) the areas and (b) the number of TH+ amacrine cells in the retinae in the four experimental groups in the different cases (different shaded columns). Columns show the mean ± standard error of the total number of cells in each case. †Represents P < 0.001, represents P < 0.01 and *represents P < 0.05 significant difference in cell number; these symbols on the columns of the MPTP group represent differences from the Saline group of each case, while symbols on the MPTP-NIr group represent differences from the MPTP group of each case. There were clear increases in TH+ cell number in the MPTP-NIr group compared to the MPTP group in all cases, particularly the Ac-PT, Ch-Sim, and Ch-PT.
Figure 3Schematic diagrams of maps ((a), (c), (e), (g)) and photomicrographs ((b), (d), (f), (h)) of TH+ amacrine cells in the retinae of Saline ((a), (b)), Saline-NIr ((c), (d)), MPTP ((e), (f)), and MPTP-NIr ((g), (h)) groups of the Ac-Sim case (this case shown because it had the most change after MPTP treatment). The photomicrographs are of a midregion of superior temporal retina in each case. In the saline control groups ((a)–(d)), TH+ cells were distributed relatively uniformly across the retina, but with a slight concentration in superior and temporal retina. In the MPTP and MPTP-NIr groups ((e)–(h)), there was no particular region of retina that was affected particularly after MPTP (or NIr) treatment. Scale bar = 100 μm.