Single neonatal treatment with vitamin A (retinol) dramatically reduced the sexual activity of adult male rats. In females there was a significant decrease in the Meyerson index and a non significant decrease in the lordosis quotient. The effect of three perinatal treatments (at the first, third and fifth day) with all-trans retinoic acid was much weaker, causing only a significant increase in the time of the first ejaculation in males and non- significant decrease in the lordosis quotient of females. The experiments call attention to the false imprinting provoking effect of materials acting on members of the steroid receptor superfamily with possible human health aspect.
Newborn rats were treated with a single dose of vitamin A (retinol), or with three doses of retinoic acid (in the 1st, 3rd and 5th days). Serum testosterone and progesterone level was measured in the four months old male and female rats, respectively. Retinol significantly decreased both hormone levels, however retinoic acid decreased the progesterone level only. In the second part of the experiments adolescent rats (in the 6th and 7th week after birth) were treated and measured similar to the newborns. In this case retinol significantly diminished testosterone level, without influencing the progesterone level. Retinoic acid decreased testosterone level and elevated progesterone level. The results demonstrate the long lasting effects of retinoid treatments at a neonatal or adolescent age, pointing also to the differences in the direction of the effects. Considering that previously the receptorial and sexual-behavioral effects of perinatal vitamin A treatments were observed, the experiments call attention to such harmful influences of perinatal vitamin A treatments, which are not manifested in morphological alterations.
In the unicellular organism, Tetrahymena, the ®rst encounter with an exogeneously given hormone results in hormonal imprinting. This causes an increase of the binding capacity of receptors and the production of the appropriate hormone in the progeny generations of the treated cell. In the present experiments the quantity (using radioimmunoassay) and localization (using confocal laser scanning microscopy) of the immunologically insulin-like material (hereafter insulin) were studied for 10 days after 4 h or 24 h 10 À6 M insulin treatment (hormonal imprinting). Forty-eight hours after both insulin treatments a high quantity of insulin was present in the cells. This value was also signi®cantly increased after 96 h. After 8 days the dierence to the control was signi®cant only in the 24 h treated group. Confocal microscopy (using antibody to pig insulin) localized insulin in the cell body. The oral ®eld contained extremely high quantities of the endogeneous hormone. Insulin treatment (after 48 and 96 h) caused an elevation of insulin content in general, and speci®c accumulation in the posterior sections of the cell, around the nucleus and in the periphery were observed. Ten days after both treatments only the peripheral region of the cell body and the ciliary row contained more insulin than the control. This means that after insulin treatment the quantity of insulin increases for a lengthy time period which is followed by the expression of insulin in the peripheral region. Insulin contained by Tetrahymena 48 h after imprinting stimulated glucose uptake of rat diaphragm.
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