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Original

Physiological Pineal Effects on Female Reproductive Function of Laboratory Rats: Prenatal Development of Pups, Litter Size and Estrous Cycle in Middle Age

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Pages 289-300 | Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The present study investigates whether and how the pineal or its hormone melatonin influences female reproductive functions, namely the litter size, prenatal development of offsprings, and estrous cyclicity, especially its age‐related cessation in a non‐seasonal breeder, the laboratory rat. Wistar rats were maintained under a 24 h light‐dark (12L∶12D) cycle. Female rats were divided into 3 groups: non‐operated (NO), sham‐operated (SX), and pinealectomized (PX). Surgeries were performed in 35–40 day‐old females. Starting at an age between 70 days and 7 months, female rats of all 3 groups were repeatedly mated with intact males. PX mothers more frequently delivered pups with malformations (e.g., taillessness, hydronephrosis, 7 out of 1263 pups) than control rats (0/1323; p<0.007). In the first delivery at 3 months of age, but not at later ages, PX mothers delivered more pups of lower body weight than control animals (p<0.001). Examination of vaginal smears showed that almost all female rats of the NO, SX, and PX groups had 4‐day estrous cyclicity when they were young–between 60 days and 5 months of age. At an age of 17 to 18 months, most female rats of the NO and SX groups showed irregular, continuously diestrous or pseudopregnancy‐like patterns, and 4‐day estrous cyclicity was found in only 10% of the NO or SX animals. In contrast, about 50% of the PX rats showed 4‐day estrous cyclicity at this older age (p< 0.001). Melatonin, when added to drinking water (0.4 mg/L) for 16 days during the dark phase increased the frequency of diestrous phase, except in continuously diestrous rats and very few others. This melatonin effect was strong in PX rats but relatively weak in SX rats. In conclusion, the pineal hormone appears to influence various reproductive functions and developmental processes, especially pregnancy and the timing of reproductive aging in rats. The effects of pinealectomy are more prominent at an age of 60 to 80 days (i.e., shortly after puberty) and at the beginning of the cessation of cycles in middle‐aged females.

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