Abstract
Melatonin (MLT) is a neurohormone that regulates many physiological functions including sleep, pain, thermoregulation, and circadian rhythms. MLT acts mainly through two G-protein-coupled receptors named MT1 and MT2, but also through an MLT type-3 receptor (MT3). However, the role of MLT receptor subtypes in thermoregulation is still unknown. We have thus investigated the effects of selective and non-selective MLT receptor agonists/antagonists on body temperature (Tb) in rats across the 12/12-h light–dark cycle. Rectal temperature was measured every 15 min from 4:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. and from 4:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., following subcutaneous injection of each compound at either 5:00 a.m. or 5:00 p.m. MLT (40 mg/kg) had no effect when injected at 5 a.m., whereas it decreased Tb during the light phase only when injected at 5:00 p.m. This effect was blocked by the selective MT2 receptor antagonist 4P-PDOT and the non-selective MT1/MT2 receptor antagonist, luzindole, but not by the α1/MT3 receptors antagonist prazosin. However, unlike MLT, neither the selective MT1 receptor partial agonist UCM871 (14 mg/kg) nor the selective MT2 partial agonist UCM924 (40 mg/kg) altered Tb during the light phase. In contrast, UCM871 injected at 5:00 p.m. increased Tb at the beginning of the dark phase, whereas UCM924 injected at 5:00 a.m. decreased Tb at the end of the dark phase. These effects were blocked by luzindole and 4P-PDOT, respectively. The MT3 receptor agonist GR135531 (10 mg/kg) did not affect Tb. These data suggest that the simultaneous activation of both MT1 and MT2 receptors is necessary to regulate Tb during the light phase, whereas in a complex but yet unknown manner, they regulate Tb differently during the dark phase. Overall, MT1 and MT2 receptors display complementary but also distinct roles in modulating circadian fluctuations of Tb.
Highlights
The maintenance of body temperature (Tb) in mammalians is critical for survival and internal homeostasis
The exogenous administration of MLT during the light phase decreased Tb immediately after the administration and before the light–dark phase shift, an effect blocked by both 4P-PDOT and luzindole
Unlike MLT, neither UCM924 nor UCM871 produced a change in Tb during the light phase
Summary
The maintenance of body temperature (Tb) in mammalians is critical for survival and internal homeostasis. The main brain structure involved in controlling Tb is the hypothalamus, which receives inputs from the thermoreceptors located in both the brain and the periphery. Depending on these inputs, homeostatic changes are subsequently induced, causing sweating or shivering [1]. The preoptic area (POA) and dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) are critical hypothalamic areas for thermoregulation. In these areas, based on the firing rate responses to changes in local brain temperature, electrophysiological recordings have shown three different neuronal populations: warm-sensitive neurons (~30%), cold-sensitive neurons (~6%), and insensitive neurons (~60%), [2,3]. GABAergic neurons in the DMD promote the increase of Tb, energy expenditure, and physical activity [4]
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