Effects of corneal injury on ciliary nerve fibre activity and corneal nociception in mice- A behavioural and electrophysiological study
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- Catégories : Publications , Système sensoriel , Système visuel - ID: 1058

Authors
F Joubert, M del Carmen Acosta, J Gallar, Darine Fakih, JAlain Sahel, C Baudouin, L Bodineau, S Mélik Parsadaniantz, A Réaux_Le Goazigo


Lab
INSERM, CNRS, Institut de la Vision, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France

Journal
European Journal of Pain

Abstract
BackgroundOcular surface diseases are among the most frequent ocular pathologies. Ocular pain following corneal injury is frequently observed in clinic. Corneal sensory innervation is supplied by ciliary nerves derived from ophthalmic division of the trigeminal ganglion.
Methods & Results Extracellular activity of the mouse ciliary nerve was first used to investigate the corneal responsiveness to chemical, mechanical and thermal stimulations in order to specifically study the responses of polymodal nociceptors, mechano_nociceptors and cold thermoreceptor in a control cornea. Then, in two models of corneal injury (repeated instillations of 0.02% benzalkonium chloride and corneal scraping), we first measured the corneal sensitivity to chemical (eye_wiping test) and mechanical (von Frey filaments) stimulation. Thereafter, we evaluated whether these corneal injuries modified the spontaneous and chemical stimulation_evoked activity of the ciliary nerve. Both models of injury induced a significant corneal chemical hypersensitivity correlated with an increase of the spontaneous activity of the ciliary nerve and a faster response of the ciliary nerve after a chemical stimulation.
Conclusions Overall, this study provides new insights into the functional aspects of corneal nerve fibre activity in mice after corneal injury. The increase in ciliary nerve activity may thus contribute to the development of ocular pain after corneal damage.
Significance This study highlights the parallel increase in ciliary nerve activity and corneal sensitivity after corneal injury in mice. The strategy of combining ex vivo electrophysiological recordings of the ciliary nerve in mice and corneal sensitivity measurements therefore helps to uncover the functional aspects of corneal pain.

BIOSEB Instruments Used:
Von Frey Filaments (Bio-VF-M)

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