Abstract

Immunohistochemical and immunoblot procedures were used to examine the effects of inhibitory short day (SD) photoperiod on the expression of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) and its polysialylated form (PSA-NCAM) in the hypothalamus and preoptic area (POA) of the adult male Siberian hamster. In animals that had undergone SD-induced gonadal regression, immunoblot analyses revealed significant reductions in the content of immunoreactive PSA in anterior hypothalamic (AH) and mediobasal hypothalamic (MBH) regions. These changes were accompanied by increased contents of the 180 kDa NCAM isoform in the POA and AH, and decreased content in the MBH. The 140 kDa NCAM isoform also was elevated in the AH. Light microscopic analysis revealed a marked reduction in the density of NCAM-immunoreactive tanycyte-like processes in the MBH of animals exposed to SD. This effect was not blocked by castration, indicating that this may be a primary (sex steroid-independent) effect of altered photoperiod in the hypothalamus. Also, photoperiod-induced alterations in NCAM expression were not evident in non-responsive hamsters that maintained active testes under SD exposure. Collectively, these results are evidence that seasonal changes in photoperiod affect the expression of NCAM and PSA in the hypothalamus. Such changes could help promote plastic morphological rearrangements related to the regulation of seasonal reproductive and/or metabolic cycles.

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