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1.
The review analyzed morphology, molecular and functional aspects of pineal gland aging and methods of it correction. The pineal gland is central organ, which regulates activity of neuroimmunoendocrine, antioxidant and other organisms systems. Functional activity of pineal gland is discreased at aging, which is the reason of melatonin level changing. The molecular and morphology research demonstrated, that pineal gland hadn't strongly pronounced atrophy at aging. Long-term experience showed, that peptides extract of pineal gland epithalamin and synthetic tetrapeptide on it base epithalon restored melatonin secretion in pineal gland and had strong regulatory activity at neuroimmunoendocrine and antioxidant organism systems.  相似文献   

2.
Todate, report about the role of pineal gland in maintaining the normal physiology of gestation is scanty. Present study is the first of its kind giving a detail profile of organ weights and plasma concentration of melatonin, estradiol and progesterone to suggest a possible role of pineal gland in maintaining normal physiology during gestation and post-parturition periods of female Indian palm squirrel F. pennanti. Inspite of, inverse pineal-gonadal/melatonin-steroids interrelationship in adult (non-pregnant) females, the present results study suggest a direct relationship of pineal gland activity with ovarian steroids especially during the gestation period. The inverse relationship of melatonin and ovarian steroids is again established after parturition and maintained throughout the life. Thus the pineal gland (activity as judged by its weight, biochemical contents i.e. protein and cholesterol and plasma melatonin level) maintained ovarian/uterine physiology and regulated plasma concentrations of estradiol and progesterone during gestation and post-parturition periods. It is suggested that the pineal gland and its hormone melatonin play an important role to maintain the normal physiology of gestation and the post-partum recovery in Indian palm squirrel F. pennanti.  相似文献   

3.
Bidirectional communication between the pineal gland and the immune system   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The pineal gland is a vertebrate neuroendocrine organ converting environmental photoperiodic information into a biochemical message (melatonin) that subsequently regulates the activity of numerous target tissues after its release into the bloodstream. A phylogenetically conserved feature is increased melatonin synthesis during darkness, even though there are differences between mammals and birds in the regulation of rhythmic pinealocyte function. Membrane-bound melatonin receptors are found in many peripheral organs, including lymphoid glands and immune cells, from which melatonin receptor genes have been characterized and cloned. The expression of melatonin receptor genes within the immune system shows species and organ specificity. The pineal gland, via the rhythmical synthesis and release of melatonin, influences the development and function of the immune system, although the postreceptor signal transduction system is poorly understood. Circulating messages produced by activated immune cells are reciprocally perceived by the pineal gland and provide feedback for the regulation of pineal function. The pineal gland and the immune system are, therefore, reciprocally linked by bidirectional communication.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the effects of diazepam (DZP) and its three metabolites: nordiazepam (NZP), oxazepam (OZP), and temazepam (TZP) on pineal gland nocturnal melatonin secretion. We looked at the effects of benzodiazepines on pineal gland melatonin secretion both in vitro (using organ perifusion) and in vivo in male Wistar rats sacrificed in the middle of the dark phase. We also examined the effects of these benzodiazepines on in vivo melatonin secretion in the Harderian glands. Neither DZP (10-5-10-6 M) nor its metabolites (10-4-10-5 M) affected melatonin secretion by perifused rat pineal glands in vitro. In contrast, a 10-4 M suprapharmacological concentration of DZP increased melatonin secretion of perifused pineal glands by 70%. In vivo, a single acute subcutaneous administration of DZP (3 mg/kg body weight) significantly affected pineal melatonin synthesis and plasma melatonin levels, while administration of the metabolites under the same conditions did not. DZP reduced pineal melatonin content (-40%), N-acetyltransferase activity (-70%), and plasma melatonin levels (-40%), but had no affects on pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activity. Neither DZP nor its metabolites affected Harderian gland melatonin content. Our results indicate that the in vivo inhibitory effect of DZP on melatonin synthesis is not due to the metabolism of DZP. The results also show that the control of melatonin production in the Harderian glands differs from that observed in the pineal gland.  相似文献   

5.
1. The presence of an iodothyronine 5'-deiodinating activity has been described in the pineal gland of various rodents, and it has been identified as a type II 5'-deiodinase isoenzyme since it is relatively insensitive to inhibition by propylthiouracil and its activity increases during hypothyroidism. 2. 5'-Deiodinase activity in the rat pineal gland follows a nyctohemeral profile, exhibiting basal values during the day and maximal values at night. The nocturnal increase is dependent on the noradrenergic input from the superior cervical ganglia, and both in vivo and in vitro studies show that beta-adrenergic receptors are primarily involved in the activation of the enzyme. 3. Day-night differences in rat pineal 5'-deiodinase activity are found beginning at 2 weeks of age, with rhythms increasing in amplitude until maximal differences are reached in adult animals. During the maturation of the rhythm, changes in regulation of enzyme activation are observed. Thus, during the first 2-3 weeks of age, alpha-adrenergic receptors appear to be as important as beta-adrenergic receptors in regulating the deiodinating activity of the pineal. However, in adults, no role of alpha-adrenergic receptors has been described. 4. Although regulation of 5'-deiodinase activity in the pineal gland is well established, few data are available concerning the physiological significance of the enzyme in the gland. Of the studies that have been performed, those attempting to demonstrate a relationship between pineal 5'-deiodinase activity and other pineal rhythms, e.g. those of melatonin production and N-acetyltransferase activity, indicates that the latter rhythms do not rely on the cyclic production of T3. The alternate possibility that the 5'D rhythm depends on the cyclic production of melatonin remains to be examined.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of the present study was to examine arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) activity and melatonin content in the pineal gland and retina as well as the melatonin concentration in plasma of the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), an avian species in which several physiological processes, including reproduction, are controlled by day length. In order to investigate whether the analyzed parameters display diurnal or circadian rhythmicity, we measured these variables in tissues isolated at regular time intervals from birds kept either under a regular light-dark (LD) cycle or under constant darkness (DD). The pineal gland and retina of the turkey rhythmically produced melatonin. In birds kept under a daily LD cycle, melatonin levels in the pineal gland and retina were high during the dark phase and low during the light phase. Rhythmic oscillations in melatonin, with high night-time concentrations, were also found in the plasma. The pineal and retinal melatonin rhythms mirrored oscillations in the activity of AANAT, the penultimate enzyme in the melatonin biosynthetic pathway. Rhythmic oscillations in AANAT activity in the turkey pineal gland and retina were circadian in nature, as they persisted under conditions of constant darkness (DD). Transferring birds from LD into DD, however, resulted in a potent decline in the amplitude of the AANAT rhythm from the first day of DD. On the sixth day of DD, pineal AANAT activity was still markedly higher during the subjective dark than during the subjective light phase; whereas, AANAT activity in the retina did not exhibit significant oscillations. The results indicate that melatonin rhythmicity in the turkey pineal gland and retina is regulated both by light and the endogenous circadian clock. The findings suggest that environmental light may be of primary importance in the maintenance of the high-amplitude melatonin rhythms in the turkey.  相似文献   

7.
The activities of serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT) and hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) and the melatonin content were measured in Syrian hamster pineal glands at 2-hr intervals over a period of 24 hr. NAT and HIOMT are the two enzymes which catalyze the formation of melatonin from serotonin. The use of micromethods for determination of the enzyme activities allowed concurrent measurement of NAT and melatonin or HIOMT and melatonin in the same gland. HIOMT activity showed no significant diurnal rhythm whereas NAT activity and melatonin content exhibited distinct peak values late in the dark phase as described previously. Despite an apparent parallelism between the NAT activity rhythm and melatonin content, no correlation exists between these parameters in single pineal glands.  相似文献   

8.
The role of the pineal gland and of its main hormone, melatonin, has not yet been clearly defined. The best known activity of the gland is antigonadal, at least in the experimental animals. In fact, the administration of melatonin or the modification of the light/darkness ratio, that is considered the most important regulatory mechanism of the melatonin-synthetic activity, leads to a gonadal regression by which all the morphological and hormonal parameters are modified. Such a mechanism is not operating in humans. However, data exist indicating a role for the pineal in this species. Our experimental data and those of the litterature indicate that the action of melatonin seems to be principally at the hypothalamic level, even though a direct action at the pituitary and gonadal levels cannot be excluded  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The aim of the present study was to examine arylalkylamine N‐acetyltransferase (AANAT) activity and melatonin content in the pineal gland and retina as well as the melatonin concentration in plasma of the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), an avian species in which several physiological processes, including reproduction, are controlled by day length. In order to investigate whether the analyzed parameters display diurnal or circadian rhythmicity, we measured these variables in tissues isolated at regular time intervals from birds kept either under a regular light‐dark (LD) cycle or under constant darkness (DD). The pineal gland and retina of the turkey rhythmically produced melatonin. In birds kept under a daily LD cycle, melatonin levels in the pineal gland and retina were high during the dark phase and low during the light phase. Rhythmic oscillations in melatonin, with high night‐time concentrations, were also found in the plasma. The pineal and retinal melatonin rhythms mirrored oscillations in the activity of AANAT, the penultimate enzyme in the melatonin biosynthetic pathway. Rhythmic oscillations in AANAT activity in the turkey pineal gland and retina were circadian in nature, as they persisted under conditions of constant darkness (DD). Transferring birds from LD into DD, however, resulted in a potent decline in the amplitude of the AANAT rhythm from the first day of DD. On the sixth day of DD, pineal AANAT activity was still markedly higher during the subjective dark than during the subjective light phase; whereas, AANAT activity in the retina did not exhibit significant oscillations. The results indicate that melatonin rhythmicity in the turkey pineal gland and retina is regulated both by light and the endogenous circadian clock. The findings suggest that environmental light may be of primary importance in the maintenance of the high‐amplitude melatonin rhythms in the turkey.  相似文献   

11.
Melatonin is synthesized primarily in the pineal gland. Lithium affects the circadian rhythms that may explain its therapeutic effectiveness in the treatment of bipolar disorder. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of lithium on the biochemical parameters involved in melatonin synthesis in the pineal gland of viscacha. Viscachas were daily intraperitoneally injected with lithium chloride or saline solution for one month. Pineal mRNAs encoding β1-adrenoceptor and arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase enzyme (AA-NAT) were studied by in situ hybridization. Pineal melatonin concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassay, and AA-NAT and hydroxyindol-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activities were investigated by radiometric assays. The only parameters that decreased significantly were the expression of AA-NAT mRNA and pineal melatonin levels. Our data suggest that lithium treatment may decrease melatonin synthesis in the viscacha pineal gland by a complex mechanism that involves currently unknown events that are beyond a decrease in the expression of AA-NAT enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Summary 1. Innervation of the mammalian pineal gland is mainly sympathetic. Pineal synthesis of melatonin and its levels in the circulation are thought to be under strict adrenergic control of serotoninN-acetyltransferase (NAT). In addition, several putative pineal neurotransmitters modulate melatonin synthesis and secretion.2. In this review, we summarize what is currently known on the pineal cholinergic system. Cholinergic signaling in the rat pineal gland is suggested based on the localization of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE), as well as muscarinic and nicotinic ACh binding sites in the gland.3. A functional role of ACh may be regulation of pineal synaptic ribbon numbers and modulation of melatonin secretion, events possibly mediated by phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis and activation of protein kinase C via muscarinic ACh receptors (mAChRs).4. We also present previously unpublished data obtained using primary cultures of rat pinealocytes in an attempt to get more direct information on the effects of cholinergic stimulus on pinealocyte melatonin secretion. These studies revealed that the cholinergic effects on melatonin release are restricted mainly to intact pineal glands since they were not readily detected in primary pinealocyte cultures.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
A Miles 《Life sciences》1989,44(6):375-385
The pineal gland hormone melatonin is now considered an important neuroendocrine component of animal physiology. Although the functional status of melatonin has been well described for subhuman species, there is a paucity of data concerning the physiological role of this hormone in man. This paucity of data has much to do with the limitations of experimental design imposed by the practical and ethical difficulties associated with the study of a nocturnally secreted hormone. The recent advent of salivary melatonin assay has provided a very practical means of monitoring melatonin secretion in long-term longitudinal type community based studies of pineal gland function in human health and disease. The efforts to describe key chronobiological changes in melatonin secretion of possible functional significance have been accompanied by a seemingly less enthusiastic search to describe the nature of the melatonin receptor, another highly important component of the 'melatonin message'. The functional relevance of specific chronobiological changes in melatonin secretion cannot be completely understood without an increased knowledge of melatonin action at the receptor level. The present work describes the recent methodological advance in the investigation of human pineal gland physiology represented by salivary melatonin assay, and discusses the present status of our knowledge of the melatonin receptor.  相似文献   

16.
The present study assessed annual adrenal gland activity in the Indian tropical Jungle bush quail, Perdicula asiatica. We also elucidated the role of the annual variations in gonadal steroids and melatonin in the regulation of its activity. Increasing day length (photoperiod), ambient temperature and rainfall are positively correlated with adrenal and gonadal functions, and inversely related to pineal gland activity. Pineal, adrenal and gonadal weights showed cyclical patterns relative to environmental factors, which were also correlated with plasma melatonin, corticosterone and gonadal steroids, respectively. In both sexes of P. asiatica, pineal gland weight and/or plasma melatonin levels were inversely related to adrenal lipids, (e.g. phospholipids, free and esterified cholesterol) and plasma corticosterone levels. Melatonin levels also showed an inverse relationship with plasma testosterone and estradiol levels. These studies indicate that changes in environmental factors promote annual variations in adrenal and gonadal activity probably by modulating the pineal gland. Melatonin receptors have been localized in the pars tuberalis, adrenal gland and gonads of birds, the pineal gland may, therefore, mediate environmental stimuli indirectly and directly to down regulate adrenal and gonadal activity, which run in parallel in this species.  相似文献   

17.
The light/dark cycle to which animals, and possibly humans, are exposed has a major impact on their physiology. The mechanisms whereby specific tissues respond to the light/dark cycle involve the pineal hormone melatonin. The pineal gland, an end organ of the visual system in mammals, produces the hormone melatonin only at night, at which time it is released into the blood. The duration of elevated nightly melatonin provides every tissue with information about the time of day and time of year (in animals that are kept under naturally changing photoperiods). Besides its release in a circadian mode, melatonin is also discharged in a pulsatile manner; the physiological significance, if any, of pulsatile melatonin release remains unknown. The exposure of animals including man to light at night rapidly depresses pineal melatonin synthesis and, therefore, blood melatonin levels drop precipitously. The brightness of light at night required to depress melatonin production is highly species specific. In general, the pineal gland of nocturnally active mammals, which possess rod-dominated retinas, is more sensitive to inhibition by light than is the pineal gland of diurnally active animals (with cone-dominated retinas). Because of the ability of the light/dark cycle to determine melatonin production, the photoperiod is capable of influencing the function of a variety of endocrine and non-endocrine organs. Indeed, melatonin is a ubiquitously acting pineal hormone with its effects on the neuroendocrine system having been most thoroughly investigated. Thus, in nonhuman photoperiodic mammals melatonin regulates seasonal reproduction; in humans also, the indole has been implicated in the control of reproductive physiology.Summary of a Plenary Lecture presented by the author in Vienna, August, 1990  相似文献   

18.
The pineal gland is involved in the regulation of tumour growth through the anticancer activity of melatonin, which presents immunomodulatory, anti-proliferative and anti-oxidant effects. In this study we measured melatonin content directly in the pineal gland, in an attempt to clarify the modulation of pineal melatonin secretory activity during tumour growth. Different groups of Walker 256 carcinosarcoma bearing rats were sacrificed at 12 different time points during 24h (12h:12h light/dark cycle) on different days during the tumour development (on the first, seventh and fourteenth day after tumour inoculation). Melatonin content in the pineal gland was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. During tumour development the amount of melatonin secreted increased from 310.9 ng/mg of protein per day from control animals, to 918.1 ng/mg of protein per day 14 days after tumour implantation, and there were changes in the pineal production profile of melatonin. Cultured pineal glands obtained from tumour-bearing rats turned out to be less responsive to noradrenaline, suggesting the existence, in vivo, of putative factor(s) modulating pineal melatonin production. The results demonstrated that during tumour development there is a modification of pineal melatonin production daily profile, possibly contributing to cachexia, associated to changes in pineal gland response to noradrenaline stimulation.  相似文献   

19.
20.
This article reviews those factors other than light that affectthe activity of the pineal gland. Both testosterone and dihydrotestosteronewere shown to have tissue specific inhibitory effects on pinealMAO activity concomitant with an increased activity of the gland.Estradiol stimulated pineal MAO activity and decreased the activityof this gland. This effect also was tissue-specific. Bilateraland unilateral experimental cryptorchidism also decreased pinealMAO activity 3 to 4 weeks after surgery. Acute stresses appearto increase adrenal catecholamine output (epinephrine and norepinephrine)as well as to stimulate local adrenergic pathways, while chronicstress, such as starvation, appears to act through the adrenalcorticosteroids by decreasing pineal MAO activity thereby indirectlyincreasing melatonin synthesis. Thusly, both components of theadrenal gland appear to act in concert to increase effectivelymelatonin synthesis by the pineal gland. Irradiation and histaminehave also been reported to affect pineal function—thelatter specifically inhibits HIOMT activity. These observationsindicate that many factors other than light affect pineal morphologyand melatonin synthesis. The pineal appears to be a true neuroendocrineorgan that is affected by hypophysectomy and is responsive tofeedback and control from other organs within the mammalianorganism.  相似文献   

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