This Week
Wakey-wakey!
01 Sep 01
EYES aren't just for seeing, they also help set our body clock. And
new evidence for how this happens suggests that our eyes have a
previously unknown type of light-sensitive cell.
Light regulates our natural cycle of sleep and wakefulness, partly by
switching off the brain's production of the sleep-inducing hormone
melatonin during the day. Debra Skene and her colleagues from the
University of Surrey, Guildford, wanted to find out whether some
wavelengths of light were better than others at suppressing
melatonin. They shone light into 22 people's eyes in the middle of the
night, when melatonin levels are naturally highest, to test the
effectiveness of six different wavelengths. As they increased the
intensity of the light, melatonin levels in the volunteers' blood
dropped.
But Skene's team was surprised to find that the shortest wavelength,
which we see as dark blue, caused the biggest drop in melatonin. This
is the wavelength which the eye's rods and cones-the cells that
gather light for vision-are least sensitive to. From this Skene
concludes that a third, unknown type of photoreceptor must be
telling the brain when to stop making the hormone.
The sensitivity of photoreceptors to different wavelengths of light
depends on the pigment they contain. Skene's finding will help
researchers identify the unknown pigment, says neuroscientist Robert
Lucas of Imperial College, London.
Skene now plans to find out whether blue light is also better at
regulating other aspects of the circadian rhythm, such as alertness.
If it is, she reckons it could be used to relieve jet lag or reset shift
workers' sleep patterns. "The amount of blue in office or factory
lighting could be increased to change people's body clocks to adapt to
their night shift more quickly," she says.
Further reading:
More at: The Journal of Physiology (vol 535, p 261)
Andrea Graves
From New Scientist magazine, vol 171 issue 2306, 01/09/2001, page 11
© Copyright New Scientist, RBI Limited 2001