Abstract

Early temporal changes in concentrations of prolactin (PRL) in serum after a sudden change in photoperiod and daily responsiveness to PRL-releasing and inhibiting factors were investigated in prepubertal Holstein bull calves exposed to different photoperiods. In calves switched from 8-hr light: 16-hr dark to 16-hr light:8-hr dark, there was no observable change in the daily pattern of serum concentrations of PRL after 1, 2, or 4 days. On the other hand, in animals switched from 16-hr light:8-hr dark to 8-hr light:16-hr dark, there was a consistent increase in serum PRL from 33.4 ng/ml on Day 0 to maximum values of 57.3, 62.7, and 78.9 ng/ml between 14 and 18 hr after onset of light on Days 1, 2, and 4, respectively. Thus, absence of light allowed expression of a daily rhythm in serum concentrations of PRL that persisted for at least 4 days after the photoperiod switch. There were no differences in L-dopa inhibition of PRL release in animals exposed to 16-hr light:8-hr dark at 3 or 15 hr after onset of light. However, thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced release of PRL was greater 3 hr after onset of light (11 hr after onset of dark) compared with release at 9, 15, and 21 hr after onset of light in animals exposed to 16-hr light:8-hr dark, but not in bulls exposed to 8-hr light:16-hr dark. The results provide evidence that the cue for the putative photosensitive period of PRL secretion in cattle may be more closely associated with onset of dark, not onset of light.

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