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1.
In the pineal gland numbers of synaptic ribbons (SR) undergo day/night changes which parallel the rhythm of melatonin synthesis. Since pineal biosynthetic activity is controlled by activation of adrenoreceptors, we investigated the effects of adrenergic agonists and antagonists on pineal synaptic ribbon numbers and N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity, the key enzyme of melatonin synthesis in rats. In vivo application of the beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol decreased melatonin synthesis when given during the dark phase but did not affect SR numbers. Treatment during daytime with the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol increased pineal NAT activity whereas SR numbers did not change. Norepinephrine stimulated NAT activity in vitro in a dose-dependent manner, but did not elevate SR numbers. Incubation with an analog of the second messenger cyclic adenosine monophosphate increased both NAT activity and SR numbers. These results suggest that the beta-adrenergic system does not play a decisive role in the regulation of the nocturnal increase in SR numbers observed in the rat pineal gland.  相似文献   

2.
Induction of c-fos protein (FOS) after the onset of darkness was studied immunocytochemically in the rat and hamster pineal gland. The animals were kept on a 12:12 h light-dark cycle. Before the dark period no FOS staining was seen in either rat or hamster pineal cells. Five hours after the onset of darkness 342 +/- 18 pinealocytes/0.2 mm2 (mean +/- SD) displayed FOS-like immunoreactivity in the hamster pineal gland; in the rat pineal gland only 5 +/- 2 pinealocytes/0.2 mm2 showed a faint staining. Two hours later the density of FOS positive cells was decreased to 60 +/- 11/0.2 mm2 in the hamster but increased to 519 +/- 103/0.2 mm2 in the rat pineal gland. Three hours before the beginning of the light period no FOS positive cells were detected in either animal. Both the rat and hamster pineal gland showed a transient and temporally defined expression of c-fos protein in the middle of the dark period. This may be related to a more active functional state of pinealocytes, which is reflected in a peak of melatonin synthesis during the darkness.  相似文献   

3.
A study is made of the number of pineal gland synaptic ribbons in 35 male Wistar rats over a 24-hour period during the months of September and February, in correlation to the serum melatonin levels during the same periods and photophases. The results of the study confirm those reported by others authors and suggest that the synaptic ribbons may be the stimuli-transmitting organs facilitating pineal secretory function.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Induction of c-fos protein (FOS) after the onset of darkness was studied immunocytochemically in the rat and hamster pineal gland. The animals were kept on a 12:12 h light-dark cycle. Before the dark period no FOS staining was seen in either rat or hamster pineal cells. Five hours after the onset of darkness 342±18 pinealocytes/0.2 mm2 (mean±SD) displayed FOS-like immunoreactivity in the hamster pineal gland; in the rat pineal gland only 5±2 pinealocytes/0.2 mm2 showed a faint staining. Two hours later the density of FOS positive cells was decreased to 60±11/0.2 mm2 in the hamster but increased to 519±103/0.2 mm2 in the rat pineal gland. Three hours before the beginning of the light period no FOS positive cells were detected in either animal. Both the rat and hamster pineal gland showed a transient and temporally defined expression of c-fos protein in the middle of the dark period. This may be related to a more active functional state of pinealocytes, which is reflected in a peak of melatonin synthesis during the darkness.  相似文献   

5.
N-acetyltransferase (NAT) is believed to be the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of melatonin from serotonin in the pineal gland. Norepinephrine released from sympathetic nerve endings within the pineal gland stimulates NAT activity and, therefore, melatonin synthesis. When an animal is subjected to a stressful stimulus, it would be expected that the increase in plasma stimulus, it would be expected that the increase in plasma catecholamines originating from the adrenal medulla and/or the sympathetic nervous system would result in a stimulation of pineal NAT activity. Adult male rats were given a 1.5cc injection of physiological saline subcutaneously into the back leg. Compared to non-injected controls, animals stressed in this manner were shown to have significantly lower pineal melatonin content 10 min after the saline injection late in the light phase of the light/dark cycle (at 18.30 h-lights on at 07.00 h). To test this more thoroughly, a time course study was conducted during the dark phase (at 02.00 h-5 hours after lights out) when pineal NAT activity and melatonin levels are either increasing or elevated. NAT activity and melatonin levels in the pineal were significantly depressed in stressed animals as compared to controls by 10 min after the saline injection, and remained so until 60 min after injection. By 90 min they had returned to control values. In the next study the nighttime response of the pineal to stress was compared in intact and adrenalectomized rats. Adrenalectomy prevented the changes in NAT activity and melatonin content associated with the saline injection. Some factor, such as a catecholamine or corticosterone from the adrenal, seems to be eliciting the response in the pineal to the saline injection. It is not known if the factor is acting centrally or directly on the pineal gland.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Summary Semiquantitative immunocytochemistry by immuno-gold techniques revealed differences in the spatial distribution of glutamate, glutamine, and taurine within the pineal gland, with greatest labeling over pinealocytes, glia, and endothelia, respectively. At the subcellular level, glutamate labeling tended to be highest over pinealocyte synaptic ribbons and mitochondria, and lowest over lipid inclusions. Pineal levels of glutamate, glutamine and taurine, as measured by high performance liquid chromatography, did not vary over a light: dark cycle. Superior cervical sympathetic denervation, which abolishes pineal melatonin synthesis, resulted in a nearly 50% reduction in pineal glutamate levels, but had no effect on levels of glutamine and taurine. Other amino acids (alanine, arginine, aspartate, serine) were reduced by 23%–33% following sympathectomy. These data suggest an important role for glutamate in pinealocyte function(s) possibly related to the noradrenergic innervation of the gland.  相似文献   

8.
In retinas and pineal glands of rat, rabbit and hen, activities of the penultimate (and key regulatory) enzyme in melatonin biosynthesis, serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT), display distinct diurnal variations, with high and low values during dark and light phase of a 12-h dark: 12-h light illumination cycle. Two-hour incubation (during daytime hours in light) of isolated pineal glands of the studied vertebrates, or the retinas, with 50 microM forskolin (plus 100 microM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, IBMX-a phosphodiesterase inhibitor), and 1 mM dibutyryl-cAMP, markedly increased the tissue NAT activity. The same procedures significantly enhanced the enzyme activity of rat retina in light, however, only during nighttime hours. The forskolin (+ IBMX)-induced increase of NAT activity in rat retina was significantly lower in a calcium-free medium, and substantially enhanced when calcium concentration was raised from 1.3 mM to 3.9 mM. Treatment of rats with IBMX or aminophylline, and rabbits with aminophylline, increased NAT activity in their pineal glands irrespective of the time of the day, whereas both phosphodiesterase inhibitors significantly increased the enzyme activity of rat retina only when injected during the subjective dark hours. It is concluded that, by analogy to vertebrate pineal gland, in vertebrate retina an increase of NAT activity (and consequently melatonin formation), stimulated both physiologically (i. e. at night), or pharmacologically, involves a cAMP- and calcium dependent process of the enzyme induction.  相似文献   

9.
The pineal gland secretes the hormone melatonin. This secretion exhibits a circadian rhythm with a zenith during night and a nadir during day. We have performed proteome analysis of the superficial pineal gland in rats during daytime and nighttime. The proteins were extracted and subjected to 2-DE. Of 1747 protein spots revealed by electrophoresis, densitometric analysis showed the up-regulation of 25 proteins during nighttime and of 35 proteins during daytime. Thirty-seven of the proteins were identified by MALDI-TOF MS. The proteins up-regulated during the night are involved in the Krebs cycle, energy transduction, calcium binding, and intracellular transport. During the daytime, enzymes involved in glycolysis, electron transport, and also the Krebs cycle were up-regulated as well as proteins taking part in RNA binding and RNA processing. Our data show a prominent day-night variation of the protein levels in the rat pineal gland. Some proteins are up-regulated during the night concomitant with the melatonin secretion of the gland. Other proteins are up-regulated during the day indicating a pineal metabolism not related to the melatonin synthesis.  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.
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   

12.
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   

13.
Abstract: Liquid chromatographic techniques that permit the simultaneous analysis of S -adenosylmethionine, melatonin, and its intermediary metabolites N -acetyl-5-hydroxytryptamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine within individual pineal glands have been developed. S -Adenosylmethionine has been shown to undergo a marked nyctohemeral rhythm in the pineal gland of the rat, with maximal levels occurring during the light period and minimal levels during the dark period. Detailed studies of the temporal relationships between the levels of S -adenosylmethionine and those of melatonin and its intermediary metabolites suggest that an association exists between the levels of S -adenosylmethionine and the status of the biosynthesis of melatonin. Exposure of animals to continuous light and the administration of the β-adrenoreceptor antagonist propranolol were both found to inhibit the induction of melatonin synthesis and prevent the reduction in the levels of S -adenosylmethionine during the dark period. As a corollary the induction of melatonin biosynthesis following the administration of the β-adrenoreceptor agonist isoproterenol during the light period was accompanied by a marked decrease in the levels of S -adenosylmethionine in the pineal gland. The significance of the link between the nyctohemeral rhythms in the levels of S -adenosylmethionine and the biosynthesis of melatonin in the pineal gland is discussed in the context of the therapeutic efficacy of S -adenosylmethionine as an antidepressant.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Summary Synaptic ribbons, functionally enigmatic structures of mammalian pinealocytes, were studied during the postnatal development of the pineal gland in the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus). On day 4 post partum, synaptic ribbons appear in cells that have already started to differentiate into pinealocytes. Between days 4 and 9, an increase in the number of synaptic ribbons occurs, concomitant with the continuing differentiation of the pineal tissue. Between days 9 and 16, when differentiation of this tissue is almost completed, the number of synaptic ribbons decreases and approaches that characteristic of the adult pineal gland. During development, the synaptic ribbons increase in length, and dense core vesicles are frequently found in the vicinity of these structures. It is assumed that a functional relationship exists between dense core vesicles and the synaptic ribbons, which are considered to be engaged in a certain form of secretory activity of the mammalian pineal gland.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft  相似文献   

16.
Djeridane Y  Touitou Y 《Life sciences》2005,76(20):2393-2401
The effects of ghrelin, a peptide hormone secreted from the stomach, on melatonin remain unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate possible ghrelin-melatonin interactions by studying the effect of ghrelin treatment on melatonin production in rat pineal and Harderian glands. Young (9 weeks) and old (20 months) male Wistar rats, maintained under a light:dark cycle regimen of 12:12, were assigned randomly to either a single subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of saline or ghrelin (1 microg/rat or 15 microg/rat) 1 h before sacrifice in the middle of the dark phase, or repeated s.c. saline or ghrelin injections (15 microg/rat), 3, 2 and 1 h before sacrificed in the middle of the dark phase. Neither ghrelin doses (1 microg/rat or 15 microg/rat) nor type of treatment (acute or repeated) influenced melatonin levels or the melatonin synthesizing enzymes N-acetyltransferase and hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activities, either in pineal gland or in Harderian glands. At the concentrations used, ghrelin does not influence melatonin production in rat pineal and Harderian glands, and therefore is not involved in the regulation of melatonin secretion, at least under our experimental conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Pineal "synaptic" ribbons are a heterogeneous population of organelles. "Synaptic" ribbons (SR) sensu stricto, "synaptic" spherules (SS), and intermediate forms (IMF) are present. Their function and origin are unknown, and a knowledge of their prenatal development is lacking. Thus the pineal glands of prenatal, neonatal, and adult guinea pigs were prepared for electron microscopy. "Synaptic" ribbons were studied morphologically and quantitatively. The three categories of "synaptic" ribbons reported in adult pineal glands were also present in prenatal pineal glands. Their structural features, distribution, grouping, and composition patterns are similar to those in adults. "Synaptic" ribbons were first detected in pinealocytes of the distal region of a 42-day postcoitus (PC) pineal gland and were comparable with those in adults. They increased in number with age and reached a peak at 63 days PC, followed by a steep decline at 66 and 67 days PC. By day 69 PC, the numbers increased again and showed a dramatic increase after birth. Several true ribbon synapses were seen at day 63 PC between pinealocyte cell processes or between pinealocyte cell process and pinealocyte cell body. Since true ribbon synapses have not been found in adult guinea pig pinealocytes, their synaptic nature could have been lost during development. No precursors for the "synaptic" ribbons were found. The endoplasmic reticulum cisternae may be the origin for the ribbon vesicles because of their close association with the "synaptic" ribbons.  相似文献   

18.
Daily rhythms of pineal and serum melatonin content were characterized for adult female Turkish hamsters (Mesocricetus brandti) exposed to long days (16L:8D, 22 degrees C) or after transfer to short days (10L:14D, 22 degrees C). The nocturnal peak of pineal melatonin content was found to be approximately 3 b greater in duration on short than on long days. Changes in levels of serum melatonin closely paralleled those of pineal melatonin. Thus, an effect of photoperiod on synthesis and secretion of pineal melatonin was demonstrated. In a separate experiment, female hamsters were induced to hibernate by exposure to a short-day, cold environment (10L:14D, 6 degrees C). During the 4 to 5-mo hibernation season, Turkish hamsters are known to display 4 to 8-day hours of torpor (body temperature = 7-9 degrees C) alternating with 1 to 3-day intervals of euthermia (body temperature = 35-37 degrees C). Little evidence of nocturnal synthesis or secretion of pineal melatonin was detected in females sampled during torpor. However, animals sampled during the first day after arousal from a torpor bout displayed melatonin rhythms no different in phase or amplitude from those seen in females held at 22 degrees C. Thus, despite the absence of pineal melatonin output during torpor, the pineal gland of hibernating Turkish hamsters produces an appropriately phased, rhythmic melatonin signal during intervals of euthermia.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The nocturnal stimulation of pineal melatonin synthesis and elevation of serum melatonin is known to be reduced in old age in several species. In Wistar rats the capacity of the beta-adrenoceptor to develop supersensitivity (increase in Bmax) during the light period of the diurnal light/dark cycle is lost during maturation (3-6 months) rather than old age. Further, the present study shows that neither the alpha 1- nor beta-adrenoceptor density of the pineal declines as rats age. Pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activity does fall (17-55%) in rats after 18 months of age, but nocturnal pineal arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase activity is not significantly altered. Thus, from examination of these parameters across the life span of the rat, it seems likely that the reported reduction in serum melatonin in old animals is related to a reduced capacity of the pineal to synthesize melatonin, rather than an altered responsiveness of the gland to neural stimulation.  相似文献   

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