Abstract

Pineal melatonin synthetic activity shows distinct diurnal characteristics. The circadian regulation of melatonin synthesis is provided by noradrenaline-releasing sympathetic nerves. The pineal noradrenaline content shows a circadian rhythmicity tidally related to the changes in melatonin synthesis rate. To evaluate possible circadian changes of pineal noradrenergic fibre arrangement, the nerve distribution in rat and guinea pig pineal glands was visualized by means of glyoxylic acid-induced histofluorescence. Histochemical findings at 08.00 h and 24.00 h did not exhibit any differences: in both species a dense, mainly perivascularly located network of fluorescent fibres was encountered. As indicated by the simultaneous intraneural presence of green-bluish and yellow fluorophores these fibres most likely contain noradrenaline and serotonin. Obviously circadian melatonin synthesis changes are not paralleled by changes in the distribution pattern of pineal sympathetic nerve fibers. Like other sympathetic innervation-related morphological parameters, histofluorescence does not accurately reflect circadian biochemical changes in the pineal gland.

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