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1.
Adult AMES mice and male Sprague Dawley rats were exposed to an artificial magnetic field, generated by Helmholtz coils. 3.5 hours after the onset of darkness the coils were activated for one hour resulting in an inversion of the horizontal component of the earth's magnetic field. The coils were activated and deactivated at 5 min intervals during the 1 hour exposure period. In both mice and rats, the levels of serotonin in the pineal were markedly increased by the exposure. In rats, an increase of pineal 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid and a decrease of the activity of the pineal enzyme serotonin-N-acetyltransferase also was observed. However, pineal and serum melatonin levels were not altered. The results indicate that the metabolism of serotonin in the pineal is quickly affected by the exposure of animals to a magnetic field.  相似文献   

2.
Chronic exposure to ELF fields may induce depression   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Exposure to extremely-low-frequency (ELF) electric or magnetic fields has been postulated as a potentially contributing factor in depression. Epidemiologic studies have yielded positive correlations between magnetic- and/or electric-field strengths in local environments and the incidence of depression-related suicide. Chronic exposure to ELF electric or magnetic fields can disrupt normal circadian rhythms in rat pineal serotonin-N-acetyltransferase activity as well as in serotonin and melatonin concentrations. Such disruptions in the circadian rhythmicity of pineal melatonin secretion have been associated with certain depressive disorders in human beings. In the rat, ELF fields may interfere with tonic aspects of neuronal input to the pineal gland, giving rise to what may be termed "functional pinealectomy." If long-term exposure to ELF fields causes pineal dysfunction in human beings as it does in the rat, such dysfunction may contribute to the onset of depression or may exacerbate existing depressive disorders.  相似文献   

3.
In an attempt to clarify further the role of the hypothalamic paraventricular nuclei (PVN) in the control of pineal function, the effects of 2 min electrical stimulation of these nuclei were investigated in acutely blinded, adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats. Pineal serotonin-N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity, melatonin content and catecholamine levels were measured by means of radio-enzymatic, radioimmunoassay and high-performance liquid-chromatography methods, respectively. All three pineal parameters underwent significant declines following brief PVN stimulation during the night time. These observations lend credence to the view that the neural pathways transmitting light information to the sympathetic innervation controlling pineal melatonin synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
In recent years, there has been a great deal of publicity concerning the possible health effects of electric and/or magnetic field exposure. One of the most frequently reported observations after the exposure of animals to either electric or magnetic fields relates to alterations in the metabolism of serotonin (5HT) to melatonin within the pineal gland. This review summarizes these results particularly in animals exposed to intermittently inverted, non-time varying magnetic fields, i.e., pulsed static magnetic fields. When exposure occurs at night, the conversation of 5HT to melatonin is typically depressed, not unlike that after light exposure at night. The mechanisms by which pulsed magnetic fields alter the ability of the pineal to convert 5HT to the chief pineal hormone melatonin remains unknown but may involve effects on any or all of the following: the retinas, the suprachiasmatic nuclei, the peripheral sympathetic nervous system, and the pinealocytes. Results to date suggest that induced electrical currents (eddy currents) produced by the pulsed magnetic fields are particularly detrimental to pineal indoleamine metabolism and may be an important causative factor in the metabolic changes measured. The physiological consequences of perturbations in the melatonin rhythm induced by magnetic field exposure remain unknown.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether the exposure of rats at night to pulsed DC magnetic fields (MF) would influence the nocturnal production and secretion of melatonin, as indicated by pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity (the rate limiting enzyme in melatonin production) and pineal and serum melatonin levels. By using a computer-driven exposure system, 15 experiments were conducted. MF exposure onset was always during the night, with the duration of exposure varying from 15 to 120 min. A variety of field strengths, ranging from 50 to 500 μT (0.5 to 5.0 G) were used with the bulk of the studies being conducted using a 100 μT (1.0 G) field. During the interval of DC MF exposure, the field was turned on and off at 1-s intervals with a rise/fall time constant of 5 ms. Because the studies were performed during the night, all procedures were carried out under weak red light (intensity of <5 μW/cm2). At the conclusion of each study, a blood sample and the pineal gland were collected for analysis of serum melatonin titers and pineal NAT and melatonin levels. The outcome of individual studies varied. Of the 23 cases in which pineal NAT activity, pineal melatonin, and serum melatonin levels were measured, the following results were obtained; in 5 cases (21.7%) pineal NAT activity was depressed, in 2 cases (8.7%) studies pineal melatonin levels were lowered, and in 10 cases (43.5%) serum melatonin concentrations were reduced. Never was there a measured rise in any of the end points that were considered in this study. The magnitudes of the reductions were not correlated with field strength (i.e., no dose-response relationships were apparent), and likewise the reductions could not be correlated with the season of the year (experiments conducted at 12-month intervals under identical exposure conditions yielded different results). Duration of exposure also seemed not to be a factor in the degree of melatonin suppression. The inconsistency of the results does not permit the conclusion that pineal melatonin production or release are routinely influenced by pulsed DC MF exposure. In the current series of studies, a suppression of serum melatonin sometimes occurred in the absence of any apparent change in the synthesis of this indoleamine within the pineal gland (no alteration in either pineal NAT activity or pineal melatonin levels). Because melatonin is a direct free radical scavenger, the drop in serum melatonin could theoretically be explained by an increased uptake of melatonin by tissues that were experiencing augmented levels of free radicals as a consequence of MF exposure. This hypothetical possibly requires additional experimental documentation. Bioelectromagnetics 19:318–329, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
The circadian rhythm of melatonin production (high melatonin levels at night and low during the day) in the mammalian pineal gland is modified by visible portions of the electromagnetic spectrum, i.e., light, and reportedly by extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields as well as by static magnetic field exposure. Both light and non-visible electromagnetic field exposure at night depress the conversion of serotonin (5HT) to melatonin within the pineal gland. Several reports over the last decade showed that the chronic exposure of rats to a 60 Hz electric field, over a range of field strengths, severely attenuated the nighttime rise in pineal melatonin production; however, more recent studies have not confirmed this initial observation. Sinusoidal magnetic field exposure also has been shown to interfere with the nocturnal melatonin forming ability of the pineal gland although the number of studies using these field exposures is small. On the other hand, static magnetic fields have been repeatedly shown to perturb the circadian melatonin rhythm. The field strengths in these studies were almost always in the geomagnetic range (0.2 to 0.7 Gauss or 20 to 70 μtesla) and most often the experimental animals were subjected either to a partial rotation or to a total inversion of the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field. These experiments showed that several parameters in the indole cascade in the pineal gland are modified by these field exposures; thus, pineal cyclic AMP levels, N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity (the rate limiting enzyme in pineal melatonin production), hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activity (the melatonin forming enzyme), and pineal and blood melatonin concentrations were depressed in various studies. Likewise, increases in pineal levels of 5HT and 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5HIAA) were also seen in these glands; these increases are consistent with a depressed melatonin synthesis. The mechanisms whereby non-visible electromagnetic fields influence the melatonin forming ability of the pineal gland remain unknown; however, the retinas in particular have been theorized to serve as magnetoreceptors with the altered melatonin cycle being a consequence of a disturbance in the neural biological clock, i.e., the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus, which generates the circadian melatonin rhythm. The disturbances in pineal melatonin production induced by either light exposure or non-visible electromagnetic field exposure at night appear to be the same but whether the underlying mechanisms are similar remains unknown.  相似文献   

7.
B Selmaoui  Y Touitou 《Life sciences》1999,64(24):2291-2297
In a previous study we have shown that exposure to a 50-Hz sinusoidal magnetic field decreased serum melatonin concentration and pineal enzyme activities in young rats (9 weeks). In the present study we looked for the effect of a magnetic field of 100 microT on serum melatonin and pineal NAT activity in aged rats and compared them to young rats. We hypothesized that aging may change sensitivity of rats to a magnetic field. Two groups of Wistar male rats [aged rats (23 months) and young rats (9 weeks)] were exposed to 50-Hz magnetic fields of 100 microT for one week (18h/day). The animals were kept under a standard 12:12 light: dark cycle with a temperature of 25 degrees C and a relative humidity of 45 to 50%. Control (sham-exposed) animals were kept in a similar environment but without exposure to a magnetic field. The animals were sacrificed under red dim light. Serum melatonin concentration and pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) and hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activities were studied. Our results showed that sinusoidal magnetic fields altered the production of melatonin (28% decrease; P <0.05) through an inhibition of pineal NAT activity (52% decrease; P <0.05) in the young rats whereas no effect was observed in aged ones. On the other hand, when comparing data from control animals between young and aged rats, we observed that serum melatonin level and NAT activity, but not HIOMT activity, decreased in aged rats (decrease by about 38% and 36% respectively). Our data strongly suggest that old rats are insensitive to the magnetic field.  相似文献   

8.
There is ample experimental evidence that changes of earth-strength static magnetic fields, pulsed magnetic fields, or alternating electric fields (60 Hz) depress the nocturnally enhanced melatonin synthesis of the pineal gland of certain mammals. No data on the effects of high-frequency electromagnetic fields on melatonin synthesis is available. In the present study, exposure to 900 MHz electromagnetic fields [0.1 to 0.6 mW/cm2, approximately 0.06 to 0.36 W/kg specific absorption rate (SAR) in rats and 0.04 W/kg in Djungarian hamsters; both continuous and/or pulsed at 217 Hz, for 15 min to 6 h] at day or night had no notable short-term effect on pineal melatonin synthesis in male and female Sprague-Dawley rats and Djungarian hamsters. Pineal synaptic ribbon profile numbers (studied in rats only) were likewise not affected. The 900 MHz electromagnetic fields, unpulsed or pulsed at 217 Hz, as applied in the present study, have no short-term effect on the mammalian pineal gland. Bioelectromagnetics 18:376–387, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Pineal tryptophan, serotonin, serotonin-N-acetyltransferase (NAT), melatonin, 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5HIAA), norephinephrine and dopamine were measured in 5 castrated rabbits each at 11.00, 00.30 and 03.00 hours. The rabbits were housed in an L:D 14:10 (lights on 07.00 hours). Significant day:night variations were found in NAT, melatonin, dopamine and norepinephrine. These results were compared to data concerning rhythms of pineal constituents in other species.  相似文献   

10.
We sought to determine whether a 6-week exposure to a 50-Hz rotating magnetic field influences melatonin synthesis by 11–18 week-old Wistar-King male rats. Rats were exposed continuously to a rotating magnetic field at 1, 5, 50, or 250 μT (spatial vector rms) for 6 weeks, except for twice-weekly breaks of about 2 h for cleaning of cages and feeding. The rats were housed in exposure and sham-exposure facilities, which were located in the same room, under a 12:12 light-dark photoperiod (lights on at 06:00 h). The room was constantly illuminated by 4 small, dim red lights (< 0.07 lux in dark period). Levels of plasma and pineal gland melatonin were determined by radioimmunoassay. A significant decrease of melatonin was observed between the control group and groups exposed to a magnetic field at a flux density in excess of l μT during the night time, but no statistical differences were found among the exposed groups. These results indicate that subchronic exposure of albino rats to a 50-Hz rotating magnetic field influences melatonin production and secretion by the pineal gland. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
As a component of studies to search for effects of 60-Hz electric field exposure on mammalian endocrine function, concentrations of melatonin, 5-methoxytryptophol, and serotonin-Nacetyl transferase activity were measured in the pineal glands of rats exposed or sham-exposed at 65 kV/m for 30 days. In two replicate experiments there were statistically significant differences between exposed and control rats in that the normal nocturnal increase in pineal melatonin content was depressed in the exposed animals. Concentrations of 5-methoxytryptophol were increased in the pineal glands of the exposed groups when compared to shamexposed controls. An alteration was also observed in serotonin-N-acetyl transferase activity, with lower levels measured in pineal glands from exposed animals.  相似文献   

12.
L Vollrath  H A Welker 《Life sciences》1988,42(22):2223-2229
Previous studies involving physical-immobilization stress in laboratory rats have yielded inconsistent results with respect to melatonin synthesis in the pineal gland. As melatonin formation undergoes circadian and infradian rhythms, the aim of the present study was to examine whether stress experiments exhibit day-to-day variation. Toward this end, groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats were stressed by physical immobilization on eight consecutive days, respectively, or left relatively undisturbed, and killed. The pineal gland was rapidly dissected out and serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity and melatonin levels were measured. NAT activity was significantly depressed on experimental days 1, 3 and 5, and slightly depressed on day 7. In addition, both in control and experimental animals NAT activity exhibited statistically significant differences between experimental days. Pineal melatonin levels were less variable. On experimental days 3 and 6 immobilization led to a significant increase of pineal melatonin levels. These results show that day-to-day variation is an important factor that influences the outcome of stress experiments and represent another example that NAT activity and pineal melatonin levels do not always show corresponding changes.  相似文献   

13.
Melatonin has been extractkd by chloroform from rat serum and quantified by the Rana pipiens tadpole bioassay. Like pineal melatonin, serum melatonin was high at mid-dark and low at mid-light. This finding suggests a diurnal rhythm of serum melatonin in the rat. Serum samples obtained at mid-dark had melatonin levels ranging from 0.02 to 0.05 ng per ml of serum. When rats were pinealectomized, melatonin activity in the serum was abolished. Thus, rat serum melatonin may originate primarily from the pineal. There was no significant change in pineal melatonin content nor in serum melatonin concentrations 7 or 12 days following orchidectomy.  相似文献   

14.
In light of recent studies demonstrating stress-induced changes in pineal indoleamine metabolism, we tested the effect of acute cold stress on pineal biosynthetic function. Adult male rats were subjected to 30, 60, or 120 min of cold exposure (Ta = 2 degrees C) during either the light or dark phase of the daily photoperiodic cycle. Controls were kept at room temperature (22 +/- 2 degrees C). Animals were killed by decapitation and pineals were analyzed by radioimmunoassay for melatonin content and by radioenzymeassay for the activity of N-acetyltransferase (NAT). Cold exposure during the day elicited no significant changes in pineal indoleamine metabolism. Exposure to cold for 1 hr during the second hour after lights off slightly increased pineal melatonin content, without a concomitant change in NAT activity. Rats exposed to 2 hr of cold beginning 2 hr after lights off, however, displayed a 50% reduction in NAT activity, whereas pineal melatonin content remained unchanged. The paradoxical response of pineal NAT activity and melatonin content are not uncommon when rats are exposed to adverse stimuli.  相似文献   

15.
Djeridane Y  Touitou Y 《Steroids》2004,69(5):343-349
This study investigates the effects of acute and chronic injections of the neurosteroid dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfate DHEA-S on pineal gland melatonin synthesis. Pineal melatonin production and plasma melatonin levels were investigated in young (9-week-old) and old (27-month-old) male Wistar rats. DHEA or DHEA-S have been administered acutely in a single intraperitoneal injection at a dosage of 50, 250, or 500 microg per animal, or on a long-term basis, i.e., for 8 days at a dosage of 100 microg per animal, 1 h before the onset of darkness. DHEA, at a dose of 50, 250, or 500 microg per animal, administered acutely to rats had no significant effects on pineal melatonin production whatever the age of the animals. In contrast, 500 microg DHEA-S induced a significant increase in the pineal melatonin content (15% in young animals and 35% in old animals) and the activity of N-acetyltransferase, the rate-limiting enzyme for melatonin synthesis in the pineal gland, (40% in young animals and 20% in old animals), without altering the activity of hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase whatever the age of the animals. At lower concentrations (50 or 250 microg) DHEA-S had no effect on pineal melatonin production regardless of the age of the rats. Chronic injection of DHEA or DHEA-S at a dose of 100 microg had no effect on pineal melatonin or NAT and HIOMT activities in the two age groups. This work shows that DHEA-S (and not DHEA) is able, at pharmacological concentrations, to stimulate melatonin production by rat pineal glands regardless of the age of the animals.  相似文献   

16.
Data from the 19th century on hallucinations and magnetic disturbances were found to exhibit a direct and statistically significant correlation. The aa magnetic index over the period 1868-89 and concurrent visual hallucinatory activity were found to co-vary (Spearman coefficient = .64; P less than .05). Magnetic influences on the pineal hormone, melatonin, are suggested as a possible source of variation.  相似文献   

17.
The aim of this work was to study the variations in the interference of neuroendocrine pineal gland and metabolically active thyroid gland in a tropical bird, Perdicula asiatica. Maximum pineal gland activity (pineal weight and melatonin level), minimum thyroid gland activity (weight, T3/T4 and thymidine kinase activity) along with less oxidative load (MDA level, SOD, CAT and ABTS activity) were observed during reproductively inactive phase (RIP) was observed. Further, a robust and significant rhythmicity was noted in melatonin levels during RIP and RAP, but no significant rhythmicity was noted in T4/T3 level by cosinor analysis. Overall, melatonin and thyroid circadian profile suggested that melatonin might be acting as an antioxidant molecule with time of the day effect in rescuing thyroid gland from free radical load in birds.  相似文献   

18.
The pineal gland plays a key role in the control of the daily and seasonal rhythms in most vertebrate species. In mammals, rhythmic melatonin (MT) release from the pineal gland is controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus via the sympathetic nervous system. In most non-mammalian species, including birds, the pineal gland contains a self-sustained circadian oscillator and several input channels to synchronize the clock, including direct light sensitivity. Avian pineal glands maintain rhythmic activity for days under in vitro conditions. Several physical (light, temperature, and magnetic field) and biochemical (Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), norepinephrine, PACAP, etc.) input channels, influencing release of melatonin are also functional in vitro, rendering the explanted avian pineal an excellent model to study the circadian biological clock. Using a perifusion system, we here report that the phase of the circadian melatonin rhythm of the explanted chicken pineal gland can be entrained easily to photoperiods whose length approximates 24 h, even if the light period is extremely short, i.e., 3L:21D. When the length of the photoperiod significantly differs from 24 h, the endogenous MT rhythm becomes distorted and does not follow the light-dark cycle. When explanted chicken pineal fragments were exposed to various drugs targeting specific components of intracellular signal transduction cascades, only those affecting the cAMP-protein kinase-A system modified the MT release temporarily without phase-shifting the rhythm in MT release. The potential role of cGMP remains to be investigated.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of organochlorine insecticides lindane (1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane) and DDT (1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl)ethane) were studied in terms of their effects on the rat pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity, hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activity and pineal and serum melatonin levels during the day (2000h) and at night (2300 and 0100h). Additionally, pineal levels of 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), serotonin (5-HT), and 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA) were estimated. Nocturnal NAT activity was increased after lindane administration; likewise, lindane augmented pineal and serum melatonin levels at 2300h. Conversely, DDT was without a statistically significant effect on either NAT activity or on pineal or serum melatonin levels. Neither lindane nor DDT significantly influenced pineal HIOMT values either during the day or at night. Likewise, neither insecticide consistently influenced pineal levels of either 5-HTP, 5-HT or 5-HIAA. The results indicate that the organochlorine insecticide, lindane, modifies pineal melatonin synthesis in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
To evaluate the effect of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) on melatonin ( N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) release and its synthesizing enzyme activities in pineal glands, pineals from adult female rats during diestrus were organ-cultured in a medium containing 10 -12, 10 -10, or 10 -8 M GnRH for 6 h. Melatonin release increased significantly in pineals cultured with 10 -10 and 10 -8 M GnRH compared to controls. However, in pineal glands that were organ-cultured in a medium containing 10 -12 to 10 -8 M GnRH, the activity of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase, which is the key regulatory enzyme in melatonin biosynthesis, showed no significant difference from controls. Likewise, GnRH at these concentrations had no significant effect on the activity of pineal hydroxyindole- O-methyltransferase, which catalyzes the final step of melatonin biosynthesis. These results show that GnRH stimulates pineal melatonin release, but suggest that GnRH does not affect its melatonin synthesis.  相似文献   

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