The gaseous messenger carbon monoxide is released from the eye into the ophthalmic venous blood depending on the intensity of sunlight
Abstrakt
Circadian and seasonal rhythms in daylight affect many physiological processes. In the eye, energy of intense visible light not only initiates a well-studied neural reaction in the retina that modulates the secretory function of the hypothalamus and pineal gland, but also activates the heme oxygenase (HO) to produce carbon monoxide (CO). This study was designed to determine whether the concentration of carbon monoxide (CO) in the ophthalmic venous blood changes depending on the phase of the day and differing extremely light intensity seasons: summer and winter. The concentration of CO in the venous blood flowing out from the nasal cavity, where heme oxygenase (HO) is expressed, but no photoreceptors, was used as a control. Sixteen mature males of a wild boar and pig crossbreed were used for this study. Samples of ophthalmic and nasal venous blood and systemic arterial and venous blood were collected repeatedly for two consecutive days during the longest days of the summer and the shortest days of the winter. The concentrations of CO in blood samples was measured using a standard addition method. During the longest days of the summer the concentration of CO in ophthalmic venous blood averaged 3.32 ± 0.71 and 3.43 ± 0.8 nmol/ml in the morning and afternoon, respectively, and was significantly higher than in the night averaging 0.89 ± 0.12 nmol/ml (p<0.001). During the shortest day of the winter CO concentration in ophthalmic venous blood was 1.11 ± 0.10 and 1.13 ± 0.14 nmol/ml during the light and nocturnal phase, respectively, and did not differ between phases, but was lower than in the light phase of the summer (p<0.01). The CO concentration in the control nasal venous blood did not differ between seasons and day phases and was lower than in ophthalmic venous blood during the summer (p<0.01) and winter (p<0.05). The results indicate that the gaseous messenger carbon monoxide is released from the eye into the ophthalmic venous blood depending on the intensity of sunlight.
Autorzy (5)
Cytuj jako
Pełna treść
pełna treść publikacji nie jest dostępna w portalu
Słowa kluczowe
Informacje szczegółowe
- Kategoria:
- Publikacja w czasopiśmie
- Typ:
- artykuł w czasopiśmie wyróżnionym w JCR
- Opublikowano w:
-
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL REGULATORS AND HOMEOSTATIC AGENTS
nr 26,
strony 111 - 118,
ISSN: 0393-974X - Język:
- angielski
- Rok wydania:
- 2012
- Opis bibliograficzny:
- Koziorowski M., Stefańczyk-Krzymowska S., Tabęcka-Łonczyńska A., Gilun P., Kamiński M.: The gaseous messenger carbon monoxide is released from the eye into the ophthalmic venous blood depending on the intensity of sunlight// JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL REGULATORS AND HOMEOSTATIC AGENTS. -Vol. 26, nr. iss. 1 (2012), s.111-118
- Weryfikacja:
- Politechnika Gdańska
wyświetlono 105 razy
Publikacje, które mogą cię zainteresować
INVESTIGATIONS OF THE EMISSION CHARACTERISTICS OF A DUAL-FUEL GAS TURBINE COMBUSTION CHAMBER OPERATING SIMULTANEOUSLY ON LIQUID AND GASEOUS FUELS
- S. Serbin,
- B. Diasamidze,
- V. Gorbov
- + 1 autorów
Pyrolysis of RDF and Catalytic Decomposition of the Produced Tar in a Char Bed Secondary Reactor as an Efficient Source of Syngas
- B. Kusz,
- D. Kardaś,
- Ł. Heda
- + 1 autorów
Performance and emission characteristics of diesel engines running on gaseous fuels in dual-fuel mode
- N. V. Nguyen,
- S. K. Nayak,
- H. S. Le
- + 7 autorów