The effect of discrete wavelengths of visible light on the developing murine embryo

Author:

Campugan Carl A.ORCID,Lim MeganORCID,Chow Darren J. X.ORCID,Tan Tiffany C. Y.ORCID,Li Tong,Saini Avishkar A.ORCID,Orth AntonyORCID,Reineck PhilippORCID,Schartner Erik P.ORCID,Thompson Jeremy G.ORCID,Dholakia KishanORCID,Dunning Kylie R.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose A current focus of the IVF field is non-invasive imaging of the embryo to quantify developmental potential. Such approaches use varying wavelengths to gain maximum biological information. The impact of irradiating the developing embryo with discrete wavelengths of light is not fully understood. Here, we assess the impact of a range of wavelengths on the developing embryo. Methods Murine preimplantation embryos were exposed daily to wavelengths within the blue, green, yellow, and red spectral bands and compared to an unexposed control group. Development to blastocyst, DNA damage, and cell number/allocation to blastocyst cell lineages were assessed. For the longer wavelengths (yellow and red), pregnancy/fetal outcomes and the abundance of intracellular lipid were investigated. Results Significantly fewer embryos developed to the blastocyst stage when exposed to the yellow wavelength. Elevated DNA damage was observed within embryos exposed to blue, green, or red wavelengths. There was no effect on blastocyst cell number/lineage allocation for all wavelengths except red, where there was a significant decrease in total cell number. Pregnancy rate was significantly reduced when embryos were irradiated with the red wavelength. Weight at weaning was significantly higher when embryos were exposed to yellow or red wavelengths. Lipid abundance was significantly elevated following exposure to the yellow wavelength. Conclusion Our results demonstrate that the impact of light is wavelength-specific, with longer wavelengths also impacting the embryo. We also show that effects are energy-dependent. This data shows that damage is multifaceted and developmental rate alone may not fully reflect the impact of light exposure.

Funder

Hospital Research Foundation

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Centre of Excellence for Nanoscale BioPhotonics, Australian Research Council

Australian Research Council, Discovery Early Career Award

RMIT University, Vice-Chancellor’s Research Fellowship

Australian Research Council

The University of Adelaide

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Developmental Biology,Obstetrics and Gynecology,Genetics,Reproductive Medicine,General Medicine

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