I don’t get migraines, but bad headaches always make me want to bury my head under a stack of pillows. Scientists may now know why:
Of the 20 blind individuals who volunteered for the study, six couldn’t perceive light at all; they lacked eyes or had a severely damaged optic nerve, which connects the eye to the brain. The other 14, who suffered from genetic and other conditions that lead to blindness, couldn’t see, but they could sense certain shades of light.
Not surprisingly, the six people who had no vision at all didn’t experience pain from light when they had a migraine. But the other 14 did. This was an interesting clue, because these individuals had faulty rods and cones, cells in the retina that do most of the work of light detection. They did, however, have other retinal cells that functioned fine, particularly those with a type of receptor called melanopsin. Melanopsin doesn’t help people see shapes, but it does react to light–specifically, blue light.
At this point, says Burstein, “we needed to follow the melanopsin,” to see whether the cells expressing it might link up with cells that transmit pain. And indeed, in the rat brain, axons from the light-sensitive melanopsin cells hooked up to specific nerve cells in the thalamus that play a role in pain sensation, the team reports online this week in Nature Neuroscience.