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Chronobiology International
The Journal of Biological and Medical Rhythm Research
Volume 3, 1986 - Issue 3
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Original Article

Development of Adrenocortical Cyclic Nucleotide (Cyclic AMP and Cyclic GMP) and Corticosterone Orcadian Rhythms in Male and Female Rats

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Pages 155-160 | Received 01 Oct 1985, Accepted 01 Feb 1986, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The daily rhythm of the adrenocortical cyclic nucleotides (cyclic AMP and cyclic GIMP) was studied in infant male and female Wistar rats before and after the establishment of an adult-like daily rhythm of plasma corticosterone. As in this strain the rhythm of corticosterone is known to be present on postnatal day 18, pups of 2 and 3 weeks of age were studied. The dams and the pups as well as the young adult animals were kept on a controlled 12L-12D photoperiod. Groups of 8–10 pups were killed at 4-hr intervals throughout the day. Plasma corticosterone levels and adrenal cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP concentrations were simultaneously measured and the daily patterns established. Pups of 2 weeks of age showed neither plasma corticosterone nor adrenal cyclic AMP rhythms whereas pups of 3 weeks of age exhibited a typical adult-like circadian rhythm for both variables. The patterns for adrenal cyclic GMP differed according to sex: In female pups no cyclic GMP circadian rhythm could be detected at either 2 or 3 wk. In male pups of 3 wk a typical mature rhythm for adrenal cyclic GMP was evident whereas in younger male pups (2 wk) a circadian rhythm was detected. This circadian rhythm, however, differed from mature circadian rhythm in that its peak was located at 1300 hr instead of 0700 hr. These results demonstrate that, unlike that of cyclic AMP the adrenal cyclic GMP circadian rhythm does not appear at the same time as the plasma corticosterone circadian rhythm. Moreover, a circadian rhythmicity for adrenal cyclic GMP can be found in the absence of any corticosterone circadian rhythm. These facts argue against the view of cyclic GMP being a mediator of ACTH-stimulated steroidogenesis.

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