4.4 Article

Interaction of 12C ions with the mouse retinal response to light

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 598, Issue -, Pages 36-40

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2015.04.048

Keywords

Electroretinogram; ERG; Retinal gamma response; OPS; Visual evoked potentials; VEP; Wild-type mice; Heavy ions irradiation; Phosphenes in space

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Funding

  1. Italian Space Agency
  2. Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics, Department of Physics of the Roma-Tor Vergata University (Roma, Italy)
  3. Department of Motor Science, University of Genova (Italy)
  4. GSI/Biophysik (Darmstadt, FRG)

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Astronauts in orbit reported phosphenes varying in shape and orientation across the visual field; incidence was correlated with the radiation flux. Patients with skull tumors treated by C-12 ions and volunteers whose posterior portion of the eye was exposed to highly ionizing particles in early studies reported comparable percepts. An origin in radiation activating the visual system is suggested. Bursts (similar to 4 ms) of C-12 ions evoked electrophysiological mass responses comparable to those to light in the retina of anesthetized wild-type mice at threshold flux intensities consistent with the incidence observed in humans. The retinal response amplitude increased in mice with ion intensity to a maximum at similar to 2000 ions/burst, to decline at higher intensities; the inverted-U relationship suggests complex effects on retinal structures. Here, we show that bursts of C-12 ions presented simultaneously to white light stimuli reduced the presynaptic mass response to light in the mouse retina, while increasing the postsynaptic retinal and cortical responses amplitude and the phase-locking to stimulus of cortical low frequency and gamma (similar to 25-45 Hz) responses. These findings suggest C-12 ions to interfere with, rather than mimicking the light action on photoreceptors; a parallel action on other retinal structures/mechanisms resulting in cortical activation is conceivable. Electrophysiological visual testing appears applicable to monitor the radiation effects and in designing countermeasures to prevent functional visual impairment during operations in space. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.

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