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AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Vol 260, Issue 1 102-R112, Copyright © 1991 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
T. J. Bartness, B. D. Goldman and E. L. Bittman
Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta 30303.
The role of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) in the response to short-day melatonin (MEL) signals was examined in long-day-housed pinealectomized (PINX) Siberian hamsters. Five- or ten-hour MEL infusions that mimicked the peak nocturnal durations of serum MEL levels in long or short days, respectively, or control saline infusions were given for 5 wk. Half the hamsters in each infusion group also received bilateral electrolytic SCN lesions. The 10-h MEL infusions reduced testes weight, body and fat pad weights, and serum prolactin (PRL) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations in unoperated controls. These short-day-type effects were blocked by SCN lesions, which often produced hyperprolactinemia. Circadian rhythms of locomotor activity were disrupted or sparse in hamsters with lesions in or near the SCN. In a second experiment, 5 wk of long-day-like, short-duration (5-h) MEL infusions were administered to hamsters that had been PINX after 8 wk of short-day exposure. Control hamsters given 5-h MEL infusions, but not 10-h MEL or saline infusions, exhibited testicular growth and increased serum PRL levels. Hamsters with SCN lesions showed similar responses, regardless of the duration or type of infusion. Although the blockade of 10-h MEL infusion-induced testicular regression by SCN lesions in experiment 1 may have been due to stimulation of the testes by PRL, it is unlikely that the hyperprolactinemia accounted for the ability of SCN lesions to block effects of 10-h MEL infusions on fat pad and body weights. Therefore, the SCN and/or neighboring structures may participate in the response to short-day MEL signals in Siberian hamsters.
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