Abstract

Juvenile bank voles (18–22 days of age) born and reared in a stimulatory long photoperiod (18L:6D, lights on 0600–2400 hr) were subjected either to a long photoperiod (18L:6D, Group L) or to a short photoperiod (6L: 18D, lights on 0800–1400 hr, Group S) for 6 to 8 weeks whereafter the animals were killed by decapitation. Possible photoperiod-induced changes in Leydig cell ultrastructure were studied by conventional transmission electron microscopy and stereological methods. Striking differences in Leydig cell ultrastructure between the experimental groups were encountered. Light deprivation induced a marked decrease in the cytoplasmic and nuclear volume as well as in the amounts of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER), rough endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and lipid inclusions in the Leydig cells. The number of myelin bodies and dense bodies seemed to be somewhat higher in the regressive Group S Leydig cells. These results are in good agreement with our previous histological and biochemical studies on the effects of photoperiod on Leydig cell function and suggest that in the bank vole the volume of mitochondria and SER in particular correlates positively with the steroidogenic capacity (the activity of C 20α22-C 27 desmolase, 17α-hydroxylase, and C 17–20 lyase in particular) of the Leydig cell.

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