In the present study, the effect of LHRH on the process of protein and/or peptide secretion characterized by the formation of granular vesicles has been studied by means of an in vitro system in the pinealocytes of three different species of rodents. LHRH has a strong influence on the activity of this process. However, this effect varies with the presence of noradrenaline (NA) in the medium and is not identical in the individual species studied. In the rat and mouse, for example, LHRH induces an increase in the number of granular vesicles when the pinealocytes are cultured in a NA-free medium, while, in contrast, in the hamster this stimulatory effect is found exclusively in the presence of NA. Moreover, in the pinealocytes of the mouse, in the presence of NA, LHRH shows an inhibitory effect on protein secretion. These results clearly demonstrate that LHRH, at least under the present in vitro conditions, acts on the synthetic activity of the pineal gland, and demonstrates the importance of pineal protein and/or peptide "hormones" in pineal endocrinology.
In the pineal, the Harderian gland and the retina of the golden hamster the day/night capacity for the synthesis of different methoxyindoles is investigated under natural conditions for one 24-hour period in the months of December, March and June. The amounts of the methoxyindoles and the diurnal rhythms in the synthesis are different in the various months during which the tests were performed. There is a striking increase in the synthesis of melatonin and methoxytryptophol in all three organs in June as compared with December. Equally striking is the high synthesis of methoxytryptamine in the pineal in June, whereas this compound was not formed in the Harderian gland and the retina in this month. Methoxytryptophan synthesis was not observed in June in any of the three organs. Methoxyindoleacetic acid rhythmicity shows a pattern more or less identical to that of melatonin and methoxytryptophol. A high synthesis exists at the end of the June day, but greater fluctuations during the days of the two other months. Acetylmethoxytryptophol is synthesized in the pineal during the night in March, but in the late afternoon in June. The largest quantity of this compound is found in the Harderian gland in December, in the pineal in March and in the retina in June. The largest amounts of melatonin and methoxytryptophol are synthesized when gonadal weight is largest. The possible correlation between the amounts synthesized, the rhythmicities in synthesis and the reproductive system is discussed.
The role of the pineal gland in mediating the effects of photoperiod on the reproductive axis is not well established in tropical mammals. Indian palm squirrels (Funambulus pennanti) were exposed to experimental long (16L:8D) and short (6L:18D) photoperiods. It was observed that the testes regressed in response to short photoperiod, while during the long photoperiod the gonads were active. When squirrels were maintained for a long experimental period (130 days) under the short photoperiodic schedule (6L:18D), gonadal regrowth eventually occurred even though the photoperiod was the same one that initially induced testicular regression. Pinealectomized animals maintained the gonadal activity even in short photoperiod, suggesting that the effect of photoperiod is mediated through the pineal gland.
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