Continuous light (CL) induces constant estrous anovulatory (CEA) syndrome and blockade of pineal gland activity. Chronic treatment with metatonin is able to overcome the anovulatory state in about 70% of CL-CEA rats, and the luteinizing effect of melatonin is significantly counteracted either by feeding the animals with a tryptophan-poor diet or by injecting methiothepin, a blocker of central serotoninergic receptors. It appears that melatonin elicits luteinization in CL-CEA rats through the brain serotoninergic system.
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the ovulation-maintaining effect of melatonin in rats, exposed to continuous light (LL), was also exerted by other pineal indoles which have been reported to influence the reproductive processes of mammals. The effect of 10 micrograms melatonin was compared with that of similar amounts of either N-acetylserotonin, 5-methoxytryptophol, 5-methoxyindole-3-acetic acid, 5-hydroxytryptophol, 5-methoxytryptamine or 5-methoxytryptophan. All these compounds appeared to be significantly less effective than melatonin in preventing the effect of LL, ovulation being preserved in only 20--33% of the rats investigated, with melatonin this percentage being 60--75%. Investigations were also carried out to assess the effect of these indole derivatives on HIOMT (hydroxyindole-O-methyl transferase) activity in synthesizing different 5-methoxyindoles in the abnormally influenced pineal gland due to LL. Melatonin, the compound the effect of which on ovarian cyclicity is strongest, stimulates 5-methoxytryptophol synthesis; while other less active compounds stimulate the synthesis of melatonin and inhibit that of O-acetyl-5-methoxytryptophol. The possibility that the effect of other indoles than melatonin on ovarian cyclicity might be due to stimulation of melatonin synthesis was considered. A possible functional relationship of the different indoles cannot be excluded.
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