The purpose of the present studies using artificial light was to determine how the timing and duration of exposure influence the light-induced suppression of pineal melatonin levels in hamsters. An 8-min exposure to 0.186 microW/cm2 of cool white fluorescent light caused a continued depression of pineal melatonin even when animals were returned to darkness. In addition, the pineal gland does not appear to change its sensitivity to light throughout the night. A 20-min exposure to 0.019 microW/cm2 of cool white fluorescent light did not significantly suppress pineal melatonin during any time of the melatonin peak, whereas a 20-min exposure to 0.186 microW/cm2 was capable of always suppressing melatonin. Furthermore, increasing the duration of 0.019-microW/cm2 exposure to 30, 60, 120, or 180 min does not increase the capacity of this irradiance to depress melatonin. Similar to artifical light, natural light has a variable capacity for suppressing nocturnal levels of pineal melatonin. Twilight irradiances of 0.138 microW/cm2 or less did not suppress nocturnal melatonin whereas twilight irradiances of 3.0 microW/cm2 or greater did suppress pineal melatonin. A few animals did have lower melatonin after a 40-min exposure to full moonlight during July (0.045 microW/cm2) or January (0.240 microW/cm2). However, pineal melatonin levels remained high in the majority of animals exposed to full moonlight.
The cytoarchitecture and immunocytochemical distribution of neuropeptides (corticotropin-releasing factor, CRF; neuropeptide Y, NPY; oxytocin, OXY; vasopressin, VP; and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, VIP) were studied in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) in male and female ground squirrels of two species (Spermophilus tridecemlineatus and S. richardsonii). Immunoreactive (IR) perikarya were found in sections incubated with VP or VIP antisera. VP-IR cell bodies were seen in the dorsal and medial parts of the nucleus in colchicine-treated animals. IR fibers were distributed throughout the SCN. In the ventral part of the nucleus, VIP-IR cells were seen in untreated animals and were more pronounced in colchicine-treated animals. VIP-IR fibers and terminals form a dense plexus throughout the nucleus. Furthermore, NPY-IR terminals and fibers with multiple varicosities, but no IR perikarya, were present in the suprachiasmatic nuclei. Within the borders of the SCN, no cell bodies or fibers were stained with CRF or OXY antisera in any animal.
The distribution of neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive (NPY-IR) perikarya, fibers, and terminals was investigated in the brain of two species of hibernatory ground squirrels, Spermophilus tridecemlineatus and S. richardsonii, by means of immunohistochemistry. In the telencephalic and diencephalic structures studied, distinct patterns of NPY-IR were observed which were essentially identical in male and female animals of both species. No differences in amount or distribution of NPY-IR structures were observed between animals which had been in induced hibernation for several months before sacrifice in March/April and those sacrificed one week after their capture in May. In some brain structures (e.g., the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus), IR cell bodies were observed only after pretreatment with colchicine. NPY-IR perikarya and fibers were found in the cerebral cortex, caudate nucleus-putamen, and dorsal part of the lateral septal nucleus. Dense fiber plexuses were seen in the lateral and medial parts of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. The numbers of IR perikarya observed in the medial part of the nucleus increased following intraventricular colchicine injections. The accumbens nucleus exhibited few IR cells and many fibers. Claustrum and endopiriform nuclei showed a considerable number of stained cells and fibers that increased in number and staining intensity in colchicine-treated ground squirrels. The induseum griseum showed a small band of IR cell bodies and varicose fibers. Bipolar of multipolar IR cells and varicose fibers were found in the basal nucleus of the amygdala. Dense fiber plexuses as well as IR terminals were seen in the median, medial, and lateral preoptic areas of the hypothalamus. Terminals and relatively few fibers were located in the periventricular, paraventricular, and supraoptic nuclei. The anterior, lateral, dorsomedial, and ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei contained relatively large numbers of terminals and fibers. In the suprachiasmatic nuclei, dense terminals were distributed mainly in the ventromedial subdivision. In the median eminence, immunoreactive terminals were concentrated in the external layer, with fibers predominant in the internal layer. NPY-IR perikarya were observed only in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus and only following colchicine treatment. In the epithalamus (superficial part of the pineal gland and habenular nuclei), varicose fibers appeared mainly in perivascular locations (pineal) or as a dense plexus (habenular nuclei). These results from ground squirrels are discussed in comparison to those obtained in other species and with regard to considerations of the physiological role of NPY.
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