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1.
Pineal melatonin rhythm in golden hamsters was abolished during hibernation. After arousal in darkness, pineal melatonin increased rapidly regardless of whether the arousal was induced during the day or at night. Rapid increase of pineal melatonin after arousal was markedly diminished in animals exposed to light. In hamsters aroused at midnight, the melatonin rhythm in constant darkness ran with the reversed phase relative to hamsters aroused at noon. Since after arousal the melatonin rhythm obviously starts anew from the same phase, we conclude that the circadian pacemaker driving the rhythm might be arrested during hibernation at the day-time phase.  相似文献   

2.
Circadian rhythms in body temperature, locomotor activity, and the circadian changes of plasma and pineal melatonin content were investigated in B6D2F(1) mice synchronized by 12 h of light and 12 h of darkness. During 8 wk continuous recording, activity and temperature displayed a marked stable and reproducible circadian rhythm, with both peaks occurring near the middle of darkness. Both 24- and 12-h rhythmic components were also significantly detected. Mean plasma melatonin concentration rose steadily during the light span and reached a maximum (30.6 +/- 10.0 pg/ml) at 11 h after light onset (HALO), then gradually decreased after the onset of darkness to a nadir (4.7 +/- 0.4 pg/ml) at 20 HALO. Mean pineal content followed a pattern parallel to that of plasma concentration (peak at 11 HALO: 17.7 +/- 1.0 pg/gland; trough at 17 HALO: 4.7 +/- 1.0 pg/gland). In addition, a second sharp peak was observed at 21 HALO (20.2 +/- 3.5 pg/gland). Plasma and pineal contents displayed large and statistically significant circadian changes, with a composite rhythm of period (24 + 12 h). This mouse model has predominant production and secretion of melatonin during the day. This possibly contributes to a similar coupling between chronopharmacology mechanisms and the rest-activity cycle in these mice and in human subjects.  相似文献   

3.
Exposure to light and darkness can rapidly induce phase shifts of the human circadian pacemaker. A type 0 phase response curve (PRC) to light that has been reported for humans was based on circadian phase data collected from constant routines performed before and after a three-cycle light stimulus, but resetting data observed throughout the entire resetting protocol have not been previously reported. Pineal melatonin secretion is governed by the hypothalamic circadian pacemaker via a well-defined neural pathway and is reportedly less subject to the masking effects of sleep and activity than body temperature. The authors reasoned that observation of the melatonin rhythm throughout the three-cycle light resetting trials could provide daily phase-resetting information, allowing a dynamic view of the resetting response of the circadian pacemaker to light. Subjects (n = 12) living in otherwise dim light (approximately 10-15 lux) were exposed to a noncritical stimulus of three cycles of bright light (approximately 9500 lux for 5 h per day) timed to phase advance or phase delay the human circadian pacemaker; control subjects (n = 11) were scheduled to the same protocols but exposed to three 5-h darkness cycles instead of light. Subjects underwent initial and final constant routine phase assessments; hourly melatonin samples and body temperature data were collected throughout the protocol. Average daily phase shifts of 1 to 3 h were observed in 11 of 12 subjects receiving the bright light, supporting predictions obtained using Kronauer's phase-amplitude model of the resetting response of the human circadian pacemaker. The melatonin rhythm in the 12th subject progressively attenuated in amplitude throughout the resetting trial, becoming undetectable for >32 hours preceding an abrupt reappearance of the rhythm at a shifted phase with a recovered amplitude. The data from control subjects who remained in dim lighting and darkness delayed on average -0.2 h per day, consistent with the daily delay expected due to the longer than 24-h intrinsic period of the human circadian pacemaker. Both temperature and melatonin rhythms shifted by equivalent amounts in both bright light-treated and control subjects (R = 0.968; p<0.0001; n = 23). Observation of the melatonin rhythm throughout a three-cycle resetting trial has provided a dynamic view of the daily phase-resetting response of the human circadian pacemaker. Taken together with the observation of strong type 0 resetting in humans in response to the same three-cycle stimulus applied at a critical phase, these data confirm the importance of considering both phase and amplitude when describing the resetting of the human circadian pacemaker by light.  相似文献   

4.
Daily variations in plasma melatonin levels in the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss were studied under various light and temperature conditions. Plasma melatonin levels were higher at mid-dark than those at mid-light under light-dark (LD) cycles. An acute exposure to darkness (2 hr) during the light phase significantly elevated the plasma melatonin to the level that is comparable with those at mid-dark, while an acute exposure to a light pulse (2 hr) during the dark phase significantly suppressed melatonin to the level that is comparable with those at mid-light. Plasma melatonin kept constantly high and low levels under constant darkness and constant light, respectively. No circadian rhythm was seen under both conditions. When the fish were subjected to simulative seasonal conditions (simulative (S)-spring: under LD 13.1:10.9 at 13 degrees C; S-summer: under LD 14.3:9.7 at 16.5 degrees C; S-autumn: under LD 11.3:12.7 at 13 degrees C; S-winter: under LD 10.1:13.9 at 9 degrees C), melatonin levels during the dark phase were significantly higher than those during the light phase irrespective of simulative seasons. The peak melatonin level in each simulative season significantly correlated with temperature but not with the length of the dark phase employed. In addition, the peak melatonin level in S-autumn was significantly higher than those in S-spring although water temperature was the same under these conditions. These results indicate that the melatonin rhythm in the trout plasma is not regulated by an endogenous circadian clock but by combination of photoperiod and water temperature.  相似文献   

5.
The pineal hormone melatonin serves as a signal of day length in the regulation of annual rhythms of physiological functions and behavior. The duration of high melatonin levels in body fluids is proportional to the duration of the dark period of the day. Due to the direct suppression of melatonin by light, the overt melatonin rhythm may differ from the endogenous rhythm driven by the hypothalamic circadian clock. The aim of this study was to find out possible differences between the overt and endogenous melatonin rhythms in goats during the course of a year. Seven Finnish landrace goats (nonlactating females) were kept under artificial lighting that approximately simulated the annual changes of day length at 60 degrees N. Blood samples for melatonin measurements by radioimmunoassay were collected at 2-h intervals during six seasons: winter (light:dark 6:18 h), early spring (10:14), late spring (14:10), summer (18:6), early fall (14:10), and late fall (10:14). Melatonin profiles were determined for 2 consecutive days, first in light-dark (LD) conditions and then in continuous darkness (DD). In LD conditions, the profiles matched the dark period with one exception: In winter, the mean peak duration was significantly shorter than the scotoperiod. In DD conditions, two types of endogenous melatonin patterns were found: a "winter pattern" (peak duration 13-15 h) in winter, early spring, early fall, and late fall, and a "summer pattern" (duration about 11 h) in late spring and summer. Thus, in equal habitual LD conditions in late spring and early fall (LD 14:10), the endogenous melatonin rhythms were not quite similar: The pattern in late spring resembled that in summer, and the pattern in early fall that in winter. These results suggest that, in addition to the light-adjusted overt melatonin rhythm, the endogenous rhythm of melatonin secretion varies during the course of a year.  相似文献   

6.
Both light and temperature can influence the pineal's synthesis of the indoleamine melatonin. An investigation of the effects of light and temperature cycles on the pineal melatonin rhythm (PMR) showed the following: (1) Both daily light cycles and daily temperature cycles could entrain the PMR; melatonin levels peaked during the dark phase of a light-dark cycle or the cool phase of a temperature cycle. (2) The PMR could be entrained by a temperature cycle as low as 2 degrees C in amplitude in lizards held in constant light or constant darkness. (3) The length of the photoperiod or thermoperiod affected the phase, amplitude, or duration of the PMR. (4) When presented together, the effects of light and temperature cycles on the PMR depended on the phase relationship between the light and temperature cycles, as well as on the strength of the entraining stimuli, such as the amplitude of the temperature cycle. (5) Exposure to a constant cold temperature (10 degrees C) eliminated the PMR, yet a rhythm could still be expressed under a 24-hr temperature cycle (32 degrees C/10 degrees C), and the rhythm peaked during the 10 degrees C phase of the cycle. (6) A 6-hr dark pulse presented during the day did not elicit a premature rise in melatonin levels. These studies show how environmental stimuli can control the pineal rhythm of melatonin synthesis and secretion. Previous studies have supported a model in which the lizard's pineal acts as a circadian pacemaker within a multioscillator circadian system, and have implicated melatonin as a hormone by which the pineal may communicate with the rest of the system. The lizard pineal, therefore, may act as a photo- and thermoendocrine transducer translating light and temperature information into an internal cue in the form of the PMR. The PMR, in turn, may control the phase and period of circadian clocks located elsewhere, insuring that the right internal events occur at the right time of day.  相似文献   

7.
Variations in pineal melatonin content throughout a 24-hour period and during different phases of the hibernation bout cycle were studied in the golden-mantled ground squirrel (Spermophilus lateralis). In addition to pineal melatonin, the circadian variation in the activities of pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) and hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) were also investigated in summer animals maintained at 22 +/- 2 degrees C, on a light:dark (L:D) schedule of 12:12 hr for 1 month (lights on at 08.00 hr). Pineal glands were collected from six animals in each group at 1200, 1600, 2000, 2400, 0200, 0400, and 0800 hr. Changes in pineal melatonin content during the hibernation bout cycle were investigated in ground squirrels housed at 4 +/- .05 degrees C in relative darkness (1.9-3.4 lux; 10:14 LD). Pineal glands were obtained between 12:00 and 18:00 hr from 30 animals during one of three phases of the cycle (deep hibernation, euthermic interbout, and entrance into hibernation). Pineal melatonin was also measured for comparison in six winter euthermic animals that were housed at 22 +/- 2 degrees C, on a L:D schedule of 10:14 hr. Melatonin was measured in individual pineal glands by radioimmunoassay. The daily melatonin rhythm in S. lateralis was characterized by a marked increase in pineal melatonin during the dark phase, in which peak nighttime values were nearly 20-fold greater than daytime basal levels. The daily rhythm for NAT activity paralleled the changes in melatonin, showing a peak activity at 0200 hr that was 45 times greater than mean daytime values.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The purpose of the study was to explore parallel and divergent features of the daily rhythms of melatonin and plasma free fatty acids (FFA) in goats exposed to different lighting conditions. From these features, we attempted to analyze whether the endogenous melatonin rhythm plays any role in the maintenance of the FFA rhythm. Seven Finnish landrace goats were kept under artificial lighting that simulated the annual changes of photoperiod at 60°N (longest photoperiod, 18 h; shortest, 6 h). The ambient temperature and feeding regimen were kept constant. Blood samples were collected 6 times a year at 2 h intervals for 2 d, first in the prevailing light-dark (LD) conditions and then after 3 d in constant darkness (DD). In LD conditions, the melatonin levels always increased immediately after lights-off and declined around lights-on, except in winter (18 h darkness), when the low daytime levels were restored clearly before lights-on. The FFA levels also displayed a consistent rhythmicity, with low levels at night and a transient peak around lights-on. In DD conditions, the melatonin profiles were very similar to those found in the habitual LD conditions, but the rhythm tended to advance. The FFA rhythm persisted also in DD, and the morning peak tended to advance. There was an overall parallelism between the two rhythms, with one significant exception. In winter in LD conditions, the morning rise in FFA levels coincided with lights-on and not with the declining phase of melatonin, whereas in DD conditions, the FFA peak advanced several hours and coincided with the declining phase of melatonin. From this finding and comparisons of the calculated rhythm characteristics, i.e., phase-shifts, phase differences, and correlations, we conclude that the daily rhythm of FFA levels is most probably generated by an endogenous oscillator, primarily adjusted by dawn, whereas the melatonin rhythm in this species is regulated by an oscillator primarily adjusted by dusk. The results did not exclude a modulatory effect of melatonin on the daily FFA profiles, but melatonin secretion, alone, does not explain the patterns sufficiently.  相似文献   

9.
Plasma triglyceride (TG) levels show a clear daily rhythm, however, thus far it is still unknown whether this rhythm results from a daily rhythm in TG production, TG uptake or both. Previous studies have shown that feeding activity affects plasma TG concentrations, but it is not clear how the daily rhythm in feeding activity affects plasma TG concentrations. In the present study, we measured plasma TG concentrations and TG secretion rates in rats at 6 Zeitgeber times to investigate whether plasma TG concentrations and TG secretion show a daily rhythm. We found that plasma TG concentrations and TG secretion show a significant day/night rhythm. Next, we removed the daily rhythm in feeding behavior by introducing a 6-meals-a-day (6M) feeding schedule to investigate whether the daily rhythm in feeding behavior is necessary to maintain the daily rhythm in TG secretion. We found that the day/night rhythm in TG secretion was abolished under 6M feeding conditions. Hepatic apolipoprotein B (ApoB) and microsomal TG transfer protein (Mttp), which are both involved in TG secretion, also lost their daily rhythmicity under 6M feeding conditions. Together, these results indicate that: (1) the daily rhythm in TG secretion contributes to the formation of a day/night rhythm in plasma TG levels and (2) a daily feeding rhythm is essential for maintaining the daily rhythm in TG secretion.  相似文献   

10.
The present study describes the photoperiodic control of annual body mass changes in captive. Svalbard ptarmigan, in particular the onset of autumnal increase and midwinter decrease in fat content under natural and simulated daylight-conditions in Tromsø (69° 46 N). Autumnal fattening commences when the birds become photorefractory and presumably depends on this condition. At present it is not known if any causal relationship is involved. Under outdoor ambient temperature, body mass begins to decline in November. However, when Svalbard ptarmigan are caged indoors at higher ambient temperatures and exposed to natural or simulated annual changes in daylength, body mass remains high until February. In these birds the depletion of fat stores appears to be triggered by the increasing daylength, since body mass remained high under permanent exposure to short days throughout spring but decreased promptly following photostimulation in May. When ptarmigan caged indoors were starved in midwinter body mass fell but increased briefly upon refeeding and thereafter declined as in the control birds throughout spring. This indicates that the winter body mass profile in Svalbard ptarmigan is not merely the passive outcome of shifts in the energy expenditure associated with thermoregulation, and that a sliding set point for body mass exists and is temporally fixed at the seasonal maximum in mid winter in birds caged under indoor ambient temperatures. The possibility is discussed that the decline in body mass seen outdoors may be associated with the increased hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal activity which follows the breaking of photorefractoriness, and that this activity is sufficiently suppressed in Svalbard ptarmigan caged indoors under exposure to short days, to delay the reduction until they are photostimulated.Abbreviations BM body mass - GH growth hormone - HPG hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal system - LL continous light - NL natural light - SD short day (4 hours light per day) - SL simulated annual changes in daylength - T a ambient temperature  相似文献   

11.
Daily and circadian variations of melatonin contents in the diencephalic region containing the pineal organ, the lateral eyes, and plasma were studied in a urodele amphibian, the Japanese newt (Cynops pyrrhogaster), to investigate the possible roles of melatonin in the circadian system. Melatonin levels in the pineal region and the lateral eyes exhibited daily variations with higher levels during the dark phase than during the light phase under a light-dark cycle of 12 h light and 12 h darkness (LD12:12). These rhythms persisted even under constant darkness but the phase of the rhythm was different from each other. Melatonin levels in the plasma also exhibited significant day-night changes with higher values at mid-dark than at mid-light under LD 12:12. The day-night changes in plasma melatonin levels were abolished in the pinealectomized (Px), ophthalmectomized (Ex), and Px+Ex newts but not in the sham-operated newts. These results indicate that in the Japanese newts, melatonin production in the pineal organ and the lateral eyes were regulated by both environmental light-dark cycles and endogenous circadian clocks, probably located in the pineal organ and the retina, respectively, and that both the pineal organ and the lateral eyes are required to maintain the daily variations of circulating melatonin levels.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of the study was to explore parallel and divergent features of the daily rhythms of melatonin and plasma free fatty acids (FFA) in goats exposed to different lighting conditions. From these features, we attempted to analyze whether the endogenous melatonin rhythm plays any role in the maintenance of the FFA rhythm. Seven Finnish landrace goats were kept under artificial lighting that simulated the annual changes of photoperiod at 60°N (longest photoperiod, 18 h; shortest, 6 h). The ambient temperature and feeding regimen were kept constant. Blood samples were collected 6 times a year at 2 h intervals for 2 d, first in the prevailing light‐dark (LD) conditions and then after 3 d in constant darkness (DD). In LD conditions, the melatonin levels always increased immediately after lights‐off and declined around lights‐on, except in winter (18 h darkness), when the low daytime levels were restored clearly before lights‐on. The FFA levels also displayed a consistent rhythmicity, with low levels at night and a transient peak around lights‐on. In DD conditions, the melatonin profiles were very similar to those found in the habitual LD conditions, but the rhythm tended to advance. The FFA rhythm persisted also in DD, and the morning peak tended to advance. There was an overall parallelism between the two rhythms, with one significant exception. In winter in LD conditions, the morning rise in FFA levels coincided with lights‐on and not with the declining phase of melatonin, whereas in DD conditions, the FFA peak advanced several hours and coincided with the declining phase of melatonin. From this finding and comparisons of the calculated rhythm characteristics, i.e., phase‐shifts, phase differences, and correlations, we conclude that the daily rhythm of FFA levels is most probably generated by an endogenous oscillator, primarily adjusted by dawn, whereas the melatonin rhythm in this species is regulated by an oscillator primarily adjusted by dusk. The results did not exclude a modulatory effect of melatonin on the daily FFA profiles, but melatonin secretion, alone, does not explain the patterns sufficiently.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between circadian rhythms in the blood plasma concentrations of melatonin and rhythms in locomotor activity was studied in adult male sheep (Soay rams) exposed to 16-week periods of short days (8 hr of light and 16 hr of darkness; LD 8:16) or long days (LD 16:8) followed by 16-week periods of constant darkness (dim red light; DD) or constant light (LL). Under both LD 8:16 and LD 16:8, there was a clearly defined 24-hr rhythm in plasma concentrations of melatonin, with high levels throughout the dark phase. Periodogram analysis revealed a 24-hr rhythm in locomotor activity under LD 8:16 and LD 16:8. The main bouts of activity occurred during the light phase. A change from LD 8:16 to LD 16:8 resulted in a decrease in the duration of elevated melatonin secretion (melatonin peak) and an increase in the duration of activity corresponding to the changes in the ratio of light to darkness. In all rams, a significant circadian rhythm of activity persisted over the first 2 weeks following transfer from an entraining photoperiod to DD, with a mean period of 23.77 hr. However, the activity rhythms subsequently became disorganized, as did the 24-hr melatonin rhythms. The introduction of a 1-hr light pulse every 24 hr (LD 1:23) for 2 weeks after 8 weeks under DD reinduced a rhythm in both melatonin secretion and activity: the end of the 1-hr light period acted as the dusk signal, producing a normal temporal association of the two rhythms. Under LL, the 24-hr melatonin rhythms were disrupted, though several rams still showed periods of elevated melatonin secretion. Significant activity rhythms were either absent or a weak component occurred with a period of 24 hr. The introduction of a 1-hr dark period every 24 hr for 2 weeks after 8 weeks under LL (LD 23:1) failed to induce or entrain rhythms in either of the parameters. The occurrence of 24-hr activity rhythm in some rams under LL may indicate nonphotoperiodic entrainment signals in our experimental facility. Reproductive responses to the changes in photoperiod were also monitored. After pretreatment with LD 8:16, the rams were sexually active; exposure to LD 16:8, DD, or LL resulted in a decline in all measures of reproductive function. The decline was slower under DD than LD 16:8 or LL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The present study examines the ovulatory activity of wild and domesticated ewes subjected to either a constant photoperiod of long days (16L:8D) or natural changes in daily photoperiod for 16 mo. The aim was to determine whether an endogenous reproductive rhythm controls seasonal reproductive activity in these sheep, and how the photoperiod might affect this. The effects of long-day photoperiods on long-term changes in prolactin and melatonin secretion were also evaluated. The two species showed changes in reproductive activity under the constant photoperiod conditions, suggesting the existence of an endogenous rhythm of reproduction. This rhythm was differently expressed in the two types of ewe (P < 0.05), with the domestic animals exhibiting much greater sensitivity to the effects of long days. A circannual rhythm of plasma prolactin concentration was also seen in both species and under both photoperiod conditions, although in both species the amplitude was always lower in the long-day animals (P < 0.01). The duration of the nocturnal melatonin plasma concentrations reflected the duration of darkness in both species and treatments. The peak melatonin concentration did not differ between seasons either under natural or long-day photoperiods.  相似文献   

15.
The rods in the retina are responsible for night vision, whereas the cone system enables day vision. We studied whether rod function in humans exhibits an endogenous circadian rhythm and if changes occur in conditions of prolonged darkness. Seven healthy subjects (mean age±SD: 25.6±12.3 yr) completed a 4.5‐day protocol during which they were kept in complete darkness (days 1 and 4) and near darkness (<0.1 lux red light, days 2 and 3). Electroretinography (ERG) and saliva collections were done at intervals of at least 3 h for 27 h on days 1 and 4. Full‐field ERGs were recorded over 10 low‐intensity green light flashes known to test predominantly rod function. As a circadian marker, salivary melatonin concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay. The ERG data showed that rod responsiveness to light progressively diminished in darkness (significantly lower a‐ and b‐wave amplitudes, longer b‐wave implicit time). The decrease in amplitude (b‐wave) from day 1 to day 4 averaged 22±14%. After correction for the darkness‐related linear trend, the circadian variations in ERG indices were weak and usually non‐significant, with slightly higher responsiveness to light during the day than night. Rod sensitivity (by K index) tended to decrease. Strikingly, the overall amount of melatonin secretion (area under 24 h curve) also decreased from day 1 to day 4 by 33.1±18.9% (p=.017). The drift of the melatonin rhythm phase was within the normal range, less than 56 min over three days. There was no significant correlation between the changes in ERG responses and melatonin. In conclusion, scotopic retinal response to (low‐intensity) light and the amount of melatonin secreted are diminished when humans are kept in continuous darkness. Both processes may have a common underlying mechanism implicating a variety of neurochemicals known to be involved in the regulation of both photoreceptor and pineal gland function.  相似文献   

16.
Daily rhythms in melatonin secretion were monitored in four healthy adult males by measuring the melatonin contents of sequential 4-hour urine specimens and of plasma samples collected at 12-hour intervals, or, in one subject, continuously for 24 hours. All subjects exhibited similar diurnal rhythms, with peak urinary melatonin excretion rates and blood melatonin levels occurring during the daily period of darkness and sleep. When the daily light/dark regimen was phase-shifted by 180°, the plasma and urinary melatonin rhythms required 5–7 days (depending on the subject) to re-entrain to the new schedule. Simultaneous measurements of plasma melatonin levels and melatonin excretion rates indicate that urinary melatonin reflects, with remarkable fidelity, circulating melatonin levels.  相似文献   

17.
Influences of light-dark (LD) cycle and moonlight exposure on plasma melatonin rhythms in the seagrass rabbitfish, Siganus canaliculatus, a lunar synchronized spawner, were determined by time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (TR-FIA). When the fish were exposed to a natural LD (12:12) cycle, plasma melatonin levels exhibited a clear daily rhythm, with higher levels at midnight and lower levels during the day. These rhythms were not evident under either constant light (LL) or constant dark (DD) conditions. Plasma melatonin levels under LL condition were low and high under DD condition. These results indicate that plasma melatonin rhythms are driven by LD cycle in this species. When the fish were exposed to the 4 lunar phases, plasma melatonin levels around the new moon were significantly higher than during the first quarter moon and the full moon. Exposure to experimental new moon and full moon conditions caused significant increases and decreases of plasma melatonin levels, respectively. The synchronous rhythmicity of melatonin levels in the plasma support the hypothesis that the seagrass rabbitfish perceives moonlight intensity and responds with secretion of melatonin into the bloodstream.  相似文献   

18.
The pineal gland of vertebrates produces and secretes the hormone melatonin in response to changes in the light-dark cycle, with high production at night and low production during the day. Melatonin is thought to play an important role in synchronizing daily and/or seasonal physiological, behavioral, and developmental rhythms in vertebrates. In this study, the functional development of the pineal melatonin-generating system was examined in the mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus, an euryhaline teleost. In this species, the pineal gland contains an endogenous oscillator, ultimately responsible for timing the melatonin rhythm. Oocytes from gravid females were collected and fertilized in vitro from sperm collected from mature males. Skull caps containing attached pineal glands were obtained from F. heteroclitus embryos at different embryonic stages and placed in static or perfusion culture under various photoperiodic regimes. Rhythmic melatonin secretion from pineal glands of embryonic F. heteroclitus embryos exposed to a 12L:12D cycle in static culture was observed at five days post-fertilization. The ontogeny of circadian-controlled melatonin production from F. heteroclitus pineal glands exposed to constant darkness for five days was also seen at day five post-fertilization. These data show that early development of the pineal melatonin-generating system in this teleost occurs prior to hatching. Pre-hatching development of the melatonin-generating system may confer some selective advantage in this species in its interactions with the environment.  相似文献   

19.
Rodents inhabiting high latitudes, close to the Arctic Circle or above it, are exposed to near 24 h daylight during the summer season. An example to such rodent species is the Norwegian lemming Lemmus lemmus, which is distributed in northern Fennoscandia. We measured daily rhythms of heat production (VO2), body temperature (Tb), motor activity and melatonin secretion (measured from its metabolite 6-sulfatoximelatonin 6-SMT) in individuals exposed to natural day light, Oulu Finland, in August 1997 and at a controlled ambient temperature of 22 °C. Our results show a daily rhythm of VO2 with an acrophase at 04:00 h and minimal values measured at 16:00 h, with a significant difference (p<0.001) between mean day and night values. 6-SMT also shows a daily rhythm with maximal secretion during the dark phase 24:00 and 06:00 h in which total 6-SMT values were 2.92±1.1 and 3.87±1.2 ng, respectively. The lowest values were recorded at 12:00 h; 0.86±0.63 ng. These results suggest that lemmings show a VO2 and melatonin daily rhythms, which seem to correlate with each other and it appears that melatonin secretion increases heat production.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Body protein sparing during starvation has been examined in fat and lean Svalbard ptarmigan. Protein utilization was determined from daily N excretion and from the rate of decrease in body mass. Changes in plasma concentrations of -hydroxybutyrate, free fatty acids, glucose, and uric acid were also recorded. When fat birds were starved for 15 days protein catabolism initially fell (phase I) and was thereafter kept low (phase II). This was evident from the temporal pattern in both N excretion and body mass loss. In two birds, N excretion eventually increased, revealing enhanced protein catabolism and thus a third phase of starvation. Changes in protein utilization were paralleled by changes in plasma uric acid. Approximately 9% of the energy demand was covered by breakdown of body protein during phase II. The importance of fat catabolism in providing energy was indicated by markedly elevated plasma levels of -hydroxybutyrate and free fatty acids. When lean birds were starved for 5 days there appeared to be no phase II. The temporal pattern of body mass loss indicated phase I and III but that of N excretion only phase III. The relative contribution of body protein to energy demand increased from 22% at day 2 to 41% at the end of starvation and was paralleled by increased plasma uric acid. When data from lean and fat birds were pooled, the changes in uric acid and N excretion were highly correlated (r=0.92, P<0.001), indicating that plasma uric acid is a reliable index of protein breakdown in starving Svalbard ptarmigan. In conclusion, starving fat Svalbard ptarmigan have a much greater capacity to spare body protein than lean birds. Fat birds effectively reduce protein catabolism and maintain this at a low level whereas starving lean birds increase protein catabolism.Abbreviations -OHB -hydroxybutyrate - BM body mass - BMR basal metabolic rate; dne daily nitrogen excretion - FFA free fatty acids - MR metabolic rate  相似文献   

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