Melatonin fulfills many of the criteria for classification as a hormone. Until recently it was considered to be elaborated exclusively by pineal organs. Melatonin synthesis by other tissues has been indicated but not demonstrated unequivocally. Trout retinas in a whole-organ culture system in vitro synthesized tritiated melatonin from a substrate containing tritiated serotonin. This raises the possibility that the trout retina is an endocrine organ.
The light/dark cycle influences the rhythmic production of melatonin by the trout pineal organ through a modulation of the serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity. In static organ culture, cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels (in darkness) and NAT activity (in darkness or light) were stimulated in the presence of forskolin, isobutylmethylxanthine, or theophylline. Analogues of cAMP, but not of cyclic GMP, induced an increase in NAT activity. Light, applied after dark adaptation, inhibited NAT activity. This inhibitory effect was partially prevented in the presence of drugs stimulating cAMP accumulation. In addition, cAMP accumulation and NAT activity increase, induced by forskolin, were temperature dependent. Finally, melatonin release, determined in superfused organs under normal conditions of illumination, was stimulated during the light period of a light/dark cycle by adding an analogue of cAMP or a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. However, no further increase in melatonin release was observed during the dark phase of this cycle in the presence of the drugs. This report shows for the first time that cAMP is a candidate as intracellular second messenger participating in the control of NAT activity and melatonin production by light and temperature.
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