Antidepressant Effect of Blue Light on Depressive Phenotype in Light-Deprived Male Rats

Author:

Meng Qinghe12,Jiang Jianjun12,Hou Xiaohong1,Jia Lixia12,Duan Xiaoxiao1,Zhou Wenjuan1,Zhang Qi1,Cheng Zhiyuan1,Wang Siqi1,Xiao Qianqian1,Wei Xuetao12,Hao Weidong12

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Toxicology, School of Public Health, Peking University

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Toxicological Research and Risk Assessment for Food Safety, Peking University, Beijing, China

Abstract

Abstract Blue light has been previously reported to play a salient role in the treatment of seasonal affective disorder. The present study aimed to investigate whether blue light had antidepressant effect on light-deprivation-induced depression model, and the underlying visual neural mechanism. Blue light mitigated depression-like behaviors induced by light deprivation as measured by elevated sucrose preference and reduced immobility time. Blue light enhanced melanopsin expression and light responses in the retina. We also found the upregulation of serotonin and brain derived neurotrophic factor expression in the c-fos-positive areas of rats treated with blue light compared with those maintained in darkness. The species gap between nocturnal albino (Sprague-Dawley rat) and diurnal pigmented animals (human) might have influenced extrapolating data to humans. Blue light has antidepressant effect on light-deprived Sprague-Dawley rats, which might be related to activating the serotonergic system and neurotrophic activity via the retinoraphe and retinoamygdala pathways. Blue light is the effective component of light therapy for treatment of depression.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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