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1.
Pineal glands of 4-day-old rats had a spontaneous rise and fall in N-acetyltransferase activity (NAT) in organ culture lasting 12–17 hr. Peak NAT increased until the pups were 10 days old, then gradually declined. Pineal glands of 28-day-old animals and of adult rats had no spontaneous rise and fall in 12–17 hr of culture. Thus, immature rat pineal glands have the capacity in vitro for the rise and fall of N-acetyltransferase in the absence of added norepinephrine.  相似文献   

2.
1. The circadian patterns of melatonin and of its synthesizing enzyme N-acetyltransferase (NAT) were investigated in the serum, retina, pineal gland and Harderian gland (HG) of two amphibian species, Bufo viridis and Rana esculenta.2. Serum melatonin levels showed no diurnal fluctuations in Bufo viridis, whereas, in Rana esculenta, they exhibited a circadian rhythm, with the highest values occurring during the night. Retina melatonin exhibited characteristic circadian patterns in both species, with the highest values occurring during the day, in Bufo, and the highest concentrations occurring at night in Rana.3. In the retina, NAT activity peaked at night in both amphibians, but in Bufo the levels were up to 30 times higher than in Rana. In the HG and in the pineal gland, NAT activity showed different patterns in the two species with no diurnal variations in Bufo, and characteristic circadian rhythms in Rana.4. In the HG and pineal gland of both species, melatonin was only occasionally detectable over the 24-hr period.5. This is the first report exploring melatonin production in Bufo viridis and Rana esculenta. In our experimental conditions, marked differences emerged between the two species.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract— Pineal serotonin N -acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.5) is a neurally regulated enzyme. It is detectable in the rat as early as 4 days prior to birth. A circadian rhythm in enzyme activity appears on the fourth day after birth. It develops most rapidly during the second week and achieves an adult magnitude by the end of the third week at which time nocturnal values are more than 30-fold greater than daytime values. Norepinephrine, which appears to be the neurotransmitter regulating this enzyme, can cause a 2- to 3-fold stimulation of N -acetyltransferase in organ cultures of pineal glands from 4-day-old animals and a 17-fold increase in the activity of glands from 15-day-old animals. Apparently the norepinephrinesensitive system controlling pineal N -acetyltransferase activity also develops most rapidly during the first few weeks of life. The circadian rhythm in the activity of serotonin N -acetyltransferase develops in the pineal glands of both male and female rats at the same rate. A similar rhythm for the enzyme was not observed in twelve other tissues of the rat.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: The circadian rhythms of serotonin N -acetyltransferase activity in the pineal glands of infant and adult rats were compared. The nighttime increase of N -acetyltransferase activity in the pineals of infant rats was blocked by removal of superior cervical ganglion or by pretreatment with reserpine, l -propranolol, and cycloheximide. Injection of isoproterenol to infant rats markedly elevated pineal N -acetyltransferase activity. When the pineal glands of infant rats were organ-cultured, N -acetyltransferase activity spontaneously increased 7–12 h after the rats were killed. When infant rats were previously denervated or pretreated with reserpine and their pineals were cultured, this spontaneous elevation of N -acetyltransferase activity was abolished, indicating that the transient increase of the enzyme activity in organ culture was due to a liberation of catecholamine from degenerating nerve endings. Additional illumination until midnight prevented the nighttime increase of N -acetyltransferase activity in intact infant rats but not in blinded infant rats. These observations are taken to indicate that N -acetyltransferase rhythm in immature rat pineals is regulated by the sympathetic nerves in the same manner as in adult rat pineals, that the immature rat pineal does not contain a time-keeping system, and that there is no extraretinal light perception in infant rats as far as N -acetyltransferase rhythm is concerned.  相似文献   

5.
We present here the initial report of a method for reproducibly obtaining primary cell cultures from pineal glands of 2-day-old rats. During culture, the putative pinealocytes became associated with each other in “nests”. Cells in these nests displayed vesicle-crowned rodlets and cilia, which are fine structural features in vivo of pinealocytes from neonatal rats. Treatment of the cultured cells with either norepinephrine or dibutyryl-cyclic AMP (db-cAMP) resulted in an increase in the activity of serotonin N-acetyltransferase, a marker activity for pineal function. This stimulation could be blocked by either cycloheximide or actinomycin D, and norepinephrine stimulation was also blocked by -propranolol. Further, the pineal cell cultures were able to support the growth of dispersed cells of rat superior cervical ganglia and to allow neurite outgrowth in these co-cultures, though the presence of nerve growth factor (NGF) in the medium of these cultures could not be detected.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: The circadian rhythms in melatonin production in the chicken pineal gland and retina reflect changes in the activity of serotonin N -acetyltransferase (arylalkylamine N -acetyltransferase; AA-NAT; EC 2.3.1.87). Here we determined that the chicken AA-NAT mRNA is detectable in follicular pineal cells and retinal photoreceptors and that it exhibits a circadian rhythm, with peak levels at night. AA-NAT mRNA was not detected in other tissues. The AA-NAT mRNA rhythm in the pineal gland and retina persists in constant darkness (DD) and constant lighting (LL). The amplitude of the pineal mRNA rhythm is not decreased in LL. Light appears to influence the phase of the clock driving the rhythm in pineal AA-NAT mRNA in two ways: The peak is delayed by ∼6 h in LL, and it is advanced by >4 h by a 6-h light pulse late in subjective night in DD. Nocturnal AA-NAT mRNA levels do not change during a 20-min exposure to light, whereas this treatment dramatically decreases AA-NAT activity. These observations suggest that the rhythmic changes in chicken pineal AA-NAT activity reflect, at least in part, clock-generated changes in mRNA levels. In contrast, changes in mRNA content are not involved in the rapid light-induced decrease in AA-NAT activity.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Isatin (Tribulin) produced a dose-dependent inhibition of both MAO A and MAO B in broken cell preparations from rat brain and pineal. However, isatin administered in vivo (80–160 mg/kg) to the intact animal significantly increased brain, but not pineal, serotonin and did not affect 5HIAA or other indoles in either brain or pineal. Further, in vivo administration did not produce detectable MAO inhibition in either tissue. In pineal organ culture, addition of isatin up to 1mM had no influence on the concentrations of pineal indoles or the activities of monoamine oxidase or serotonin N-acetyltransferase. However, the diazepam augmentation of beta adrenergic induction of serotonin N-acetyltransferase activity was blocked by isatin. The results of these studies call into question the proposed role of isatin as an endogenous monoamine oxidase inhibitor but support a possible role as a benzodiazepine receptor blocker.  相似文献   

9.
The present study investigated the correlation between the light-mediated decrease in rat pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) observed in vivo and changes in cAMP metabolism. While exposing dark-adapted rats to light for short time periods (0–10 min) resulted in a rapid decrease in pineal NAT activity, cAMP exhibited a biphasic response. Following light exposure for 30 s there was a 50% decrease in cAMP levels. However, after 6 min of light exposure the cyclic nucleotide levels had increased 2–3 times above control values. These responses were prevented by phenoxybenzamine pretreatment and the initial decrease was mimicked by i.v. propranolol administration. Examination of cAMP metabolic enzymes, adenylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase revealed an increase in adenylate cyclase activity following 6 min of exposure to light. We discussed how the results observed in vivo compare with those observed using cultured pinealocytes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Abstract: Because σ receptors are richly concentrated in the rat pineal gland, the present study was performed to investigate their possible role in the modulation of melatonin production. To this purpose, we assessed in vivo the effects of the σ-receptor ligands 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)- N -allylnormetazocine on the rat pineal gland activity during either the daytime or the nighttime. Compared with vehicle, 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)- N -allylnormetazocine potentiated the enhancement of N -acetyltransferase activity and pineal melatonin content induced by isoproterenol administration during the daytime, whereas they did not affect the diurnal basal biosynthetic activity of the gland. Conversely, at night, 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)- N -allylnormetazocine enhanced significantly the physiological increases in both pineal N -acetyltransferase activity and melatonin levels. This enhancement was prevented by pretreatment with rimcazole, a specific σ-receptor antagonist. These findings suggest that, in rats, the activation of pineal σ-receptor sites does not affect the biosynthetic activity of the pineal gland during daytime, whereas it pontentiates the production of melatonin when the gland is noradrenergically stimulated either by isoproterenol administration or by the endogenously released norepinephrine at nighttime.  相似文献   

12.
A specific assay to measure the activity of the enzyme acetyl-CoA:arylamine N-acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.5) from pigeon liver is described. The assay is based on the HPLC analysis of N-acetylserotonin formed by the enzymatic reaction. A reversed-phase column (Spherisorb 5-μm ODS 2; 150 × 3.2 mm) eluted with 0.1 M sodium acetate (pH 4.75)/methanol (75:25) permits baseline separation of serotonin and N-acetylserotonin within 5.3 min. Several variables on the enzyme reaction were studied to obtain maximum activity. The enzyme is most active in glycine buffer at pH 9.5. The apparent Km value for serotonin (at 0.6 mM CoASAc) is 0.246 mM and 9.9 μM for CoASAc (at 1.5 mM serotonin). To avoid acetyl-CoA or N-acetylserotonin consumption in side-reactions, the enzyme was purified. A two-step purification process (ammonium sulfate fractionation and affinity chromatography on immobilised amethopterin) yielded 60–70% of the initial enzyme activity with a purification factor of 455–560.  相似文献   

13.
The role of the pineal gland is to translate the rhythmic cycles of night and day encoded by the retina into hormonal signals that are transmitted to the rest of the neuronal system in the form of serotonin and melatonin synthesis and release. Here we describe that the production of both melatonin and serotonin by the pineal gland is regulated by a circadian-related heteromerization of adrenergic and dopamine D4 receptors. Through α1 B-D4 and β1-D4 receptor heteromers dopamine inhibits adrenergic receptor signaling and blocks the synthesis of melatonin induced by adrenergic receptor ligands. This inhibition was not observed at hours of the day when D4 was not expressed. These data provide a new perspective on dopamine function and constitute the first example of a circadian-controlled receptor heteromer. The unanticipated heteromerization between adrenergic and dopamine D4 receptors provides a feedback mechanism for the neuronal hormone system in the form of dopamine to control circadian inputs.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: Following light on at night experiments, N-acetyltransferase level declines, at first rapidly and after 20 min more slowly. We partly characterised the night N-acetyltransferase and the residual N-acetyltransferase 20 min after light on. Both enzymes had pH optimum 6.8 and were inactivated thermally in vitro with a half time of 8 min. Pre-treatment with cycloheximide or puromycin did not block the rise in N-acetyltransferase following isoprotenerol ad-ministration shortly after light on. We propose that night N-acetyltransferase is one enzyme. After light on, the enzyme rapidly deactivates to a less active form. Isoprotenerol applied within a short time may partly reactivate the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
In all the vertebrates, synthesis of melatonin and its rhythm-generating enzyme arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) reaches its peak in the pineal during the night in a daily light-dark cycle, but the role of different neuronal signals in their regulation were unknown for any fish. Hence, the authors used specific agonist and antagonists of receptors for different neuronal signals and regulators of intracellular calcium (Ca2+) and adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) in vitro to study their effects on the abundance of AANAT and titer of melatonin in the carp (Catla catla) pineal. Western blot analysis followed by quantitative analysis of respective immunoblot data for AANAT protein, radioimmunoassay of melatonin, and spectrophotometric analysis of Ca2+ in the pineal revealed stimulatory effects of both adrenergic (α1 and β1) and dopaminergic (D1) agonists and cholinergic (both nicotinic and muscarinic) antagonists, inhibition by both adrenergic and dopaminergic antagonists and cholinergic agonists, but independent of the influence of any agonists or antagonists of α2-adrenergic receptors. Band intensity of AANAT and concentration of melatonin in the pineal were also enhanced by the intracellular calcium-releasing agent, activators of both calcium channel and adenylate cyclase, and phophodiesterase inhibitor, but suppressed by inhibitor of calcium channel and adenylate cyclase as well as activator of phophodiesterase. Moreover, an inhibitory effect of light on the pineal AANAT and melatonin was blocked by both cAMP and proteasomal proteolysis inhibitor MG132. Collectively, these data suggest that dark-induced abundance of AANAT and melatonin synthesis in the carp pineal are a multineuronal function, in which both adrenergic (α1 and β1, but not α2) and dopaminergic signals are stimulatory, whereas cholinergic signals are inhibitory. This study also provides indications, though arguably not conclusive evidence, that in either case the neuronal mechanisms follow a signal-transduction pathway in which Ca2+ and cAMP may act as the intracellular messengers. It also appears that proteasomal proteolysis is a conserved event in the regulation of AANAT activity in vertebrates. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

16.
Summary The rhythm in melatonin production in the rat is driven by a circadian rhythm in the pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity. Rats adapted to an artificial lighting regime of 12 h of light and 12 h of darkness per day were exposed to an 8-h advance of the light-dark regime accomplished by the shortening of one dark period; the effect of melatonin, triazolam and fluoxetine, together with 5-hydroxytryptophan, on the reentrainment of the NAT rhythm was studied.In control rats, the NAT rhythm was abolished during the first 3 cycles following the advance shift. It reappeared during the 4th cycle; however, the phase relationship between the evening rise in activity and the morning decline was still compressed.Melatonin accelerated the NAT rhythm reentrainment. In rats treated chronically with melatonin at the new dark onset, the rhythm had already reappeared during the 3rd cycle, in the middle of the advanced night, and during the 4th cycle, the phase relationship between the evening onset and the morning decline of the NAT activity was the same as before the advance shift. In rats treated chronically with melatonin at the old dark onset or in those treated with melatonin 8 h, 5 h and 2 h after the new dark onset during the 1st, 2nd and 3rd cycle, respectively, following the advance shift, the NAT rhythm reappeared during the 3rd cycle as well but in the last third of the advanced night only.Neither triazolam nor fluoxetine together with 5-hydroxytryptophan administered around the new dark onset facilitated NAT rhythm reentrainment after the 8-h advance of the light-dark cycle.Abbreviations NAT N-acetyltransferase - LD cycle light-dark cycle - CT circadian time - LD xy light dark cycle comprising x h of light and y h of darkness  相似文献   

17.
18.
In mammals, light information received by the eyes is transmitted to the pineal gland via the circadian pacemaker, i.e., the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Melatonin secreted by the pineal gland at night decodes night length and regulates seasonal physiology and behavior. Melatonin regulates the expression of the β-subunit of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH; Tshb) in the pars tuberalis (PT) of the pituitary gland. Long day-induced PT TSH acts on ependymal cells in the mediobasal hypothalamus to induce the expression of type 2 deiodinase (Dio2) and reduce type 3 deiodinase (Dio3) that are thyroid hormone-activating and hormone-inactivating enzymes, respectively. The long day-activated thyroid hormone T3 regulates seasonal gonadotropin-releasing hormone secretion. It is well established that the circadian clock is involved in the regulation of photoperiodism. However, the involvement of the circadian clock gene in photoperiodism regulation remains unclear. Although mice are generally considered non-seasonal animals, it was recently demonstrated that mice are a good model for the study of photoperiodism. In the present study, therefore, we examined the effect of changing day length in Per2 deletion mutant mice that show shorter wheel-running rhythms under constant darkness followed by arhythmicity. Although the amplitude of clock gene (Per1, Cry1) expression was greatly attenuated in the SCN, the expression profile of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase, a rate-limiting melatonin synthesis enzyme, was unaffected in the pineal gland, and robust photoperiodic responses of the Tshb, Dio2, and Dio3 genes were observed. These results suggested that the Per2 clock gene is not necessary for the photoperiodic response in mice.  相似文献   

19.
The biosynthesis of serotonin into melatonin was decreased in old (18-20-month) in comparison to young (4-5-month) male Wistar rats. 5-day morning injections to young and old rats with polypeptide pineal preparation (epithalamin) in a dose of 2.5 mg/kg of body weight induced the increase in the night peak of serotonin, N-acetylserotonin and melatonin in young and melatonin alone in old rats and did not influence 5-methoxytryptamine, 5-oxy- and 5-methoxyindoleacetic acids level. These data support suggestion of ultrashort loop between pineal peptides and indoles and that epithalamin increases the metabolism of serotonin into melatonin.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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