Photoperiodic activation of Fos-like immunoreactive protein in neurones within the tuberal hypothalamus of Japanese quail
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Comparative Physiology A
- Vol. 176 (1) , 79-89
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00197754
Abstract
Photoperiodic stimulation of quail () resulted in the appearance of a nuclear -like protein within neurones of the basal tuberal hypothalamus. On transfer to long days the number of neurones containing this -like immunoreactivity increased from about 150 to 700, the neurones being scattered throughout the length of the tubero-infundibular complex. This activation had occurred by early in the second long day and was maintained for at least three long days. Over this period circulating levels of LH increased seven-fold, indicating that photoperiodic induction had taken place in the birds. A similar time-course of -like induction occurred in castrated quail exposed to a single long day and then returned to short days. Activation mirrored the long-term changes in LH secretion found in this paradigm and -like immunoreactivity showed the same “carry-over” characteristics of photoperiodic induction, being maximal two days after the quail had been exposed to the single long day (and were again on short days) and when LH secretion was at its maximum. Activation of -like immunoreactive cells did not take place when long-day quail were transferred to short photoperiods. The evidence supports the view that the neurones being activated are involved in a specific fashion in the avian photoperiodic response.Keywords
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