Previously it has been found that pinealectomy in rats was associated with increased small bowel crypt cell proliferation. The hypothalamus is thought to play a role in the neural control of crypt cell proliferation and the pineal gland is known to be functionally connected with this component of the autonomic nervous system. Consequently, the effect on crypt cell mitotic rate of pinealectomy with autonomic denervation of the rat small bowel (local sympathectomy and truncal vagotomy) was observed to determine the possible importance of the autonomic nervous system in the mediation of the effects of pinealectomy on the crypts. It was found that interruption of either the vagal or sympathetic nerve supply to the small intestine both significantly decreased the usual hyperproliferative effect on the crypt cells observed after pinealectomy. It is suggested that the overall effect of the pineal gland is to suppress the crypt cell proliferation rate and that this effect is mediated, at least to some extent, by (1) the direct connections between the pineal gland and the hypothalamus, (2) the connections between the hypothalamus and the vagal and sympathetic innervation of the gut, and (3) the influence of the autonomic innervation on the activity of the enteric plexuses in relationship to the crypts. The pineal may have a role in modulating the local control mechanism of crypt cell proliferation. Its exact role in the control of crypt cell proliferation has not yet been defined.
Previously it has been found that rat small bowel crypt cell hyperplasia occurred several weeks after pinealectomy. To determine if this effect was longer-lasting (because of the possible role of the pineal in bowel malignancy) the crypt cell proliferation rate was determined in rat small bowel and colon 6 months after pinealectomy, using a stathmokinetic technique. Although the hyperproliferative effect of pinealectomy was well maintained in the small bowel crypts after 6 months, the hyperproliferative effect in the colonic crypts was much less marked. There is no obvious explanation for these findings, although it is possible that regional differences in levels of gut neuropeptides or melatonin are involved. The mechanism of the effect of pinealectomy on the crypts remains unexplained--in particular, why the effect is so prolonged.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.