Abstract
The developmental changes of hypothalamic and anterior pituitary tachykinin concentrations were studied in female Siberian hamsters kept either under short (SD) or long (LD) daily photoperiods. The animals were killed between 15 and 70 days of age. Hypothalamic NKA sharply increased starting at 15 days up to 50 days in LD animals, and between 20 and 60 days in SD animals. Hypothalamic SP levels increased in a similar manner in SD animals, but in LD animals the increment was less pronounced, with increased levels from day 20 to 40, followed by a plateau. In the anterior pituitary gland, NKA concentrations in LD animals increased at 40 days of age, with only slight increases afterward, but overall the increment curve was considerably flatter than for hypothalamic NKA. In SD animals, the increase of anterior pituitary NKA was much steeper than in LD animals. However, the total content of NKA in the AP was similar in both SD and LD animals, because the AP weight was considerably higher in LD- than in SD-exposed hamsters. These results showed that photoperiod did not markedly affect the developmental changes in hypothalamic NKA. The developmental changes in anterior pituitary NKA concentrations were considerably smaller than in the hypothalamus in LD animals, but in SD animals they were much steeper. NKA concentrations in the anterior pituitary were markedly affected by the photoperiod. Concentrations of NKA in the anterior pituitary of the Siberian hamster at the age of 15 days of age were already higher than in the anterior pituitary of adult rats or Syrian hamsters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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