Abstract
The circadian rhythm of melatonin output displayed by chick pineal cells in static culture damps rapidly in constant red light (RR). This can be seen in the first cycle following a switch from a cycle of 12 hr white light (L) and 12 hr red light (R) to RR. Melatonin output is higher during the "day" in R than it is in L, but higher that next night (in R) after daytime L than after daytime R. This effect might be due entirely to the entraining effect of L. Alternatively, the higher nocturnal output after daytime L could be related to the acute suppression caused by L; it might be a "rebound" phenomenon. These alternative hypotheses differ in their predictions for the effects of norepinephrine (NE) and pertussis toxin (PT). Previous results dissociated the acute and entraining effects of L: PT blocks the acute effect but not the entraining effect of L. NE mimics the acute effect of L (and is blocked by PT), but not the entraining effect. If L prevents damping entirely by entrainment, then NE should not mimic and PT should not block this same-cycle effect of daytime L on nocturnal melatonin output. However, the present research found that NE did mimic and PT did block this effect, indicating that the ability of L to prevent damping is mediated by a same-cycle "rebound" following L's acute inhibition of melatonin production. Furthermore, NE enhanced the "rebound" effect of daytime L, and cycles substituting NE for L were effective in driving the melatonin rhythm. Lowering extracellular potassium did not induce a "rebound," and adding exogenous melatonin did not prevent one. The difference between nocturnal melatonin synthesis after daytime R and that after daytime L or NE implies regulation of coupling between the output of the circadian pacemaker and melatonin production. These results also suggest a role for NE in regulating and maintaining the expression of the melatonin rhythm.