Abstract
The circadian rhythm of the liver, namely organ weight, cellular structures (by light-microscopy), glycogen content (by periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) reaction) and mitotic activity, was studied in 166 male Sprague-Dawley rats orally treated daily at 0800-0900 with 70 (study 1) or 50 (study 2) mg/kg phenobarbital (PB) for 7days. Thereafter, eight (study 1) or five (study 2) rats each were studied at 4-hr intervals at 1000, 1400, 1800, 2200, 0200, 0600 and 1000 through till the following day. The lighting schedule in the colony was 12:12, light:dark (light from 0600 to 1800). The liver weight was raised in PB-treated rats at all times of the day compared to controls and showed a distinct circadian rhythm with a peak at 1000 and a minimum at 2200 in PB-treated rats and the controls. The circadian rhythm of cellular structures was closely related to the hepatic glycogen content which was in good agreement with the controls, but at 1400 and 1800 the glycogen particles were more distinctly diminished in the enlarged centrilobular hepatocytes of PB-treated rats. The mitotic activity of hepatocytes was markedly increased in rats treated with PB but showed the same circadian rhythm as controls with a peak at 1000.