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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 23, 1069-1074, Copyright © 1980 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Psychology,
University of California,
Berkeley, California 94720 Melatonin administered via s.c. Silastic capsules caused the testes of white-footed mice to
regress; after 9 weeks of treatment with a 25 mm capsule, spermatogenesis was arrested, and
testicular and seminal vesicle weights reduced to 32% and 21% of control values, respectively. The
testes of mice bearing melatonin capsules recrudesced after 30 weeks and spermatogenesis resumed,
indicating that the neuroendocrine axis eventually becomes unresponsive to melatonins antigonadal effects. Other mice maintained on a 15L:9D photoperiod (lights on at 0700 h) were
injected once daily for 10 weeks with melatonin (5 or 25 µg per injection) or with the sesame oil
vehicle. There was a diurnal rhythm of responsiveness to melatonin. Males injected at 1800 h had
regressed testes and reduced seminal vesicle weights; injections at 1100 h or 1530 h had no detectable effects on spermatogenesis, testicular size, or seminal vesicle weight. These findings suggest
that melatonin exerts antigonadal effects in Peromyscus leucopus.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by Grant HD-02982
and by a postdoctoral fellowship to P.G.J. We are
grateful to Darlene Frost, John Schutz, Barbara Ries,
and Laurie Grater for technical assistance, to Kathy
Stout for typing the manuscript, and to Richard
Tardiff and John King for providing us with animals.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J. Glass and G. Lynch Melatonin: identification of sites of antigonadal action in mouse brain Science, November 13, 1981; 214(4522): 821 - 823. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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