Abstract

N-Acetyltransferase (NAT) activity was determined in the pineal gland of frogs ( Rana tigrina) of different ages using 2-aminofluorene and p-aminobenzoic acid as substrates, and assayed by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Frogs of different ages were either killed during the light phase or exposed to darkness or light for 1 min during the dark phase of the lighting cycle, then returned to their cages in darkness for 30 min before being killed. The pineal gland NAT activity of 1-month-old frogs was inhibited when the animal was nocturnally exposed to 1 min of light. Nocturnal light exposure did not inhibit NAT activity in 1-month-old frogs, even though these animal displayed clear light-dark differences in pineal gland NAT activity. Nocturnal light exposure did not inhibit night-time levels of NAT activity in 1-month-old animals which had been bilaterally enucleated, thus suggesting that this effect is retinally mediated. Pretreatment of 1-month-old and 6-month-old animals with isoproterenol (a beta-adrenoceptor agonist drug) prevented the nocturnal light-induced inhibition of NAT activity. From the different sensitivity of 1-month-old and 6-month-old animals to different intensities or durations of nocturnal light exposure it was found that the duration or intensity of light exposure was not able to inhibit nocturnal NAT activity. The NAT activity was at least 4–5-fold greater in 1-month-old frogs than in 6-month-old frogs. This is the first demonstration of the retino-pineal gland pathway that appears to produce light-induced changes in pineal glands of frogs 1-month-old or older, but this pathway only functions in 1-month-old frogs, and does not appear to function in 6-month-old frogs.

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