Abstract
Holtzman male rats were castrated or sham-operated at 22 days of age and raised in a 12 h light: 12 h dark illumination cycle. At age 63 days they were sacrificed by decapitation at six different times during the light:dark (L:D) cycle, and hypothalamic histamine (H) concentrations were measured using a modified single isotope-enzyme microassay. Hypothalamic H was significantly elevated in the castrated rats at all but two of the six times sampled during the L:D cycle, when compared with the sham-operated controls. Both surgical groups had similar 24-h rhythms of hypothalamic H concentrations, with the peak concentration occurring during the light phase followed by a rapid drop to the minimum 2-3 h later. However, the castrated rats appeared to attain both maximal and minimal concentrations somewhat earlier in the day. These results provide circumstantial evidence that hypothalamic H may have a role in the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-gonadal axis in the male rat.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: