Levodopa inhibits the development of lens-induced myopia in chicks
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Thomson, Kate
Morgan, Ian
Karouta, Cindy
Ashby, Regan
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Volume Title
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Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Animal models have demonstrated a link between dysregulation of the retinal dopamine system
and the development of myopia (short‑sightedness). We have previously demonstrated that topical
application of levodopa in chicks can inhibit the development of form‑deprivation myopia (fDM) in a
dose‑dependent manner. Here, we examine whether this same protection is observed in lens‑induced
myopia (LiM), and whether levodopa’s protection against fDM and LiM occurs through a dopamine
D1- or D2-like receptor mechanism. To do this, levodopa was first administered daily as an intravitreal
injection or topical eye drop, at one of four ascending doses, to chicks developing LiM. Levodopa’s
mechanism of action was then examined by co-administration of levodopa injections with D1-like
(SCH-23390) or D2-like (spiperone) dopamine antagonists in chicks developing FDM or LIM. For both
experiments, levodopa’s effectiveness was examined by measuring axial length and refraction after
4 days of treatment. Levodopa inhibited the development of LIM in a dose-dependent manner similar
to its inhibition of fDM when administered via intravitreal injections or topical eye drops. in both fDM
and LiM, levodopa injections remained protective against myopia when co‑administered with ScH‑
23390, but not spiperone, indicating that levodopa elicits its protection through a dopamine D2-like
receptor mechanism in both paradigms.
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Scientific Reports
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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