Central Control of the Pineal Gland: Visual Pathways
- 1 February 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 18 (2) , 208-218
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1968.00470320110013
Abstract
UNDER 1 normal lighting conditions the rat pineal gland exhibits a diurnal variation in its content of the amines serotonin1 and norepinephrine2 and the enzyme hydroxyindole-O-methyl transferase (HIOMT).3 Each of these rhythms is affected by changes in environmental lighting. The norepinephrine and HIOMT rhythms appear to be predominantly under photic control and are suppressed in animals kept in continuous light or darkness and in blinded animals.3,4 The serotonin rhythm, in contrast, is eliminated when animals are placed in constant light but persists in animals deprived of visual stimulation.1 Each of the rhythms is maintained by neural information transmitted to the pineal from the central nervous system by the cervical sympathetics. Denervation of the pineal by superior cervical ganglionectomy abolishes all of the rhythms.2-4 In addition, destroying these nerves in the female rat suppresses the vaginal estrus response to continuous environmental illumination, a responseThis publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Visual Pathway Mediating Pineal Response to Environmental LightScience, 1967
- Light-Induced Changes in Pineal Hydroxyindole- O -Methyltransferase: Abolition by Lateral Hypothalamic LesionsScience, 1966
- ACCESSORY OPTIC SYSTEM IN MARSUPIAL PHALANGER TRICHOSURUS VULPECULA - AN EXPERIMENTAL DEGENERATION STUDY1966