Abstract
A method for superficial pinealectomy of the adult white-footed mouse,Peromyscus leucopus, is presented. Histological examination of the brain of pinealectomized mice showed that the deep pineal gland was left intact. The survival rate of pinealectomized mice was 80%. Pinealectomized mice were exposed to a short day photoperiod (8L:16D) at 15°C for 7 weeks. After this time male mice maintained active gonads with a testicular index (TI, testis width×length/body weight) of 2.0±0.1. Testis weight was 202±35 mg, and the seminiferous tubules contained abundant spermatozoa (spermatogenic index [SI]=4.5±0.2). Sham operated animals had regressed testes. TI was 1.2±0.2, testis weight was 97±26 mg, and the SI was 2.7±0.7 (allP<0.05 relative to pinealectomized mice). Pinealectomized females were reproductively competent in that all of the mice had a perforate vagina, the reproductive tract weight (vagina, uterus, oviducts, and ovaries) was 111±15 mg, and the ovaries from each animal contained preovulatory follicles. Sham operated mice had an imperforate vagina, reproductive tract weights were 34±5 mg, and in only 1 out of 5 mice did the ovaries contain a preovulatory follicle (allP<0.05). The weight of the lipid-free interscapular brown fat was 28% less in pinealectomized mice relative to sham operated animals (P<0.01). These results support the role of the pineal gland as regulator of short day, cold induced reproductive regression and brown fat hypertrophy.
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