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Ashton A, Stoney PN, Ransom J, McCaffery P. Rhythmic Diurnal Synthesis and Signaling of Retinoic Acid in the Rat Pineal Gland and Its Action to Rapidly Downregulate ERK Phosphorylation. Mol Neurobiol 2018. [PMID: 29520716 PMCID: PMC6153719 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-018-0964-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
Vitamin A is important for the circadian timing system; deficiency disrupts daily rhythms in activity and clock gene expression, and reduces the nocturnal peak in melatonin in the pineal gland. However, it is currently unknown how these effects are mediated. Vitamin A primarily acts via the active metabolite, retinoic acid (RA), a transcriptional regulator with emerging non-genomic activities. We investigated whether RA is subject to diurnal variation in synthesis and signaling in the rat pineal gland. Its involvement in two key molecular rhythms in this gland was also examined: kinase activation and induction of Aanat, which encodes the rhythm-generating melatonin synthetic enzyme. We found diurnal changes in expression of several genes required for RA signaling, including a RA receptor and synthetic enzymes. The RA-responsive gene Cyp26a1 was found to change between day and night, suggesting diurnal changes in RA activity. This corresponded to changes in RA synthesis, suggesting rhythmic production of RA. Long-term RA treatment in vitro upregulated Aanat transcription, while short-term treatment had no effect. RA was also found to rapidly downregulate extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2 phosphorylation, suggesting a rapid non-genomic action which may be involved in driving the molecular rhythm in ERK1/2 activation in this gland. These results demonstrate that there are diurnal changes in RA synthesis and activity in the rat pineal gland which are partially under circadian control. These may be key to the effects of vitamin A on circadian rhythms, therefore providing insight into the molecular link between this nutrient and the circadian system.
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Affiliation(s)
- Anna Ashton
- Institute of Medical Sciences, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland, AB25 2ZD, UK
| | - Patrick N Stoney
- Cell Signal Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Okinawa, Japan
| | - Jemma Ransom
- Institute of Medical Sciences, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland, AB25 2ZD, UK
| | - Peter McCaffery
- Institute of Medical Sciences, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland, AB25 2ZD, UK.
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Fejér Z, Röhlich P, Szél A, Dávid C, Zádori A, Manzano MJ, Vígh B. Comparative ultrastructure and cytochemistry of the avian pineal organ. Microsc Res Tech 2001; 53:12-24. [PMID: 11279666 DOI: 10.1002/jemt.1064] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/09/2022]
Abstract
The breeding of birds is expected to solve problems of nourishment for the growing human population. The function of the pineal organ synchronizing sexual activity and environmental light periods is important for successful reproduction. Comparative morphology of the avian pineal completes data furnished by experiments on some frequently used laboratory animals about the functional organization of the organ. According to comparative histological data, the pineal of vertebrates is originally a double organ (the "third" and the "fourth eye"). One of them often lies extracranially, perceiving direct solar radiation, and the other, located intracranially, is supposed to measure diffuse brightness of the environment. Birds have only a single pineal, presumably originating from the intracranial pineal of lower vertebrates. Developing from the epithalamus, the avian pineal organ histologically seems not to be a simple gland ("pineal gland") but a complex part of the brain composed of various pinealocytes and neurons that are embedded in an ependymal/glial network. In contrast to organs of "directional view" that develop large photoreceptor outer segments (retina, parietal pineal eye of reptiles) in order to decode two-dimensional images of the environment, the "densitometer"-like pineal organ seems to increase their photoreceptor membrane content by multiplying the number of photoreceptor perikarya and developing follicle-like foldings of its wall during evolution ("folded retina"). Photoreceptor membranes of avian pinealocytes can be stained by antibodies against various photoreceptor-specific compounds, among others, opsins, including pineal opsins. Photoreceptors immunoreacting with antibodies to chicken pinopsin were also found in the reptilian pineal organ. Similar to cones and rods representing the first neurons of the retina in the lateral eye, pinealocytes of birds possess an axonal effector process which terminates on the vascular surface of the organ as a neurohormonal ending, or forms ribbon-containing synapses on pineal neurons. Serotonin is detectable immunocytochemically on the granular vesicles accumulated in neurohormonal terminals. Pinealocytic perikarya and axon terminals also bind immunocytochemically recognizable excitatory amino acids. Peripheral autonomic fibers entering the pineal organ through its meningeal cover terminate near blood vessels. Being vasomotor fibers, they presumably regulate the blood supply of the pineal tissue according to the different levels of light-dependent pineal cell activity.
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Affiliation(s)
- Z Fejér
- Department of Human Morphology and Developmental Biology, Semmelweis University, Tüzoltó u. 58, 1094 Budapest, Hungary
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Fu Z, Kato H, Sugahara K, Kubo T. Vitamin A deficiency reduces the responsiveness of pineal gland to light in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica). Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 1998; 119:593-8. [PMID: 11249007 DOI: 10.1016/s1095-6433(97)00471-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/16/2022]
Abstract
Synthesis of melatonin in pineal gland is under the control of light environment. The recent finding of the presence of rhodopsin-like photopigment (pinopsin) and retinal in the avian pinealocytes has led to a hypothesis that vitamin A is involved in photoresponses of the pineal gland. We have thus analyzed the effect of vitamin A deficiency on the regulatory system of melatonin synthesis in the pineal gland of Japanese quail. Depletion of vitamin A from Japanese quails was attained by feeding them with a vitamin A-free diet supplemented with retinoic acid. In the vitamin A-deficient birds, diurnal rhythm in melatonin production persisted such that the phase of the wave was similar to that seen in the control birds. However, the amplitude of the nighttime surge of pineal melatonin was damped by vitamin A deficiency. When the control birds were briefly exposed to light at night, pineal melatonin dropped to the daytime level. In contrast, only slight decrease was observed in the vitamin A-deficient quails. The light responsiveness was restored after feeding the vitamin A-deficient quails with the control diet for 1 week. These results indicate that vitamin A plays essential roles in maintaining sufficient responsiveness of the avian pineal gland to photic input.
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Affiliation(s)
- Z Fu
- Faculty of Agriculture, Utsunomiya University, Japan
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Abstract
The chicken pineal gland has an endogenous circadian oscillator that controls the diurnal oscillation of N-acetyltransferase activity responsible for melatonin rhythm. It has been speculated that the chicken pineal cell contains a photoreceptive molecule that receives the environmental light signal and transmits the signal to the oscillator for resetting the phase. In spite of several lines of evidence suggesting the similarity between retinal and pineal photon-signal transducing proteins, the identity of the photoreceptive molecule had been an open question. In 1994, we isolated a pineal cDNA encoding a novel photoreceptive molecule and named it "pinopsin." The protein expressed in 293EBNA cells bound 11-cis-retinal to form a blue-sensitive pigment with an absorption maximum at about 470 nm. A putative G-protein interaction site of pinopsin shared a relatively high similarity in amino acid sequence to that of rhodopsin, implying that pinopsin functionally couples with transducin or transducin-like G-protein(s) in the pineal cells. We have cloned a cDNA for chicken pineal transducin alpha-subunit, and the deduced amino acid sequence contained a potential site to be ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin (PTX). Therefore, the transducin-mediated pathway could be blocked by PTX, though previous studies showed that treatment of the cultured chicken pineal cells with PTX had no effect on the light-induced phase-shift of the oscillator. Accordingly, it is unlikely that transducin mediates the light-input pathway to the oscillator, which may involve PTX-insensitive G-protein(s) or some unidentified component(s). The G-protein coupled receptor-mediated signaling processes regulating melatonin synthesis are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- T Okano
- Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Japan
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Effects of phosphodiesterase inhibitors and forskolin on cyclic GMP-activated channels in intact isolated cells of the chick pineal gland. Neurochem Int 1995. [DOI: 10.1016/0197-0186(95)80011-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/19/2022]
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Abstract
In avian pinealocytes, an environmental light signal resets the phase of the endogenous circadian pacemaker that controls the rhythmic production of melatonin. Investigation of the pineal phototransduction pathway should therefore reveal the molecular mechanism of the biological clock. The presence of rhodopsin-like photoreceptive pigment, transducin-like immunoreaction, and cyclic GMP-dependent cation-channel activity in the avian pinealocytes suggests that there is a similarity between retinal rod cells and pinealocytes in the phototransduction pathway. We have now cloned chicken pineal cDNA encoding the photoreceptive molecule, which is 43-48% identical in amino-acid sequence to vertebrate retinal opsins. Pineal opsin, produced by transfection of complementary DNA into cultured cells, was reconstituted with 11-cis-retinal, resulting in formation of a blue-sensitive pigment (lambda max approximately 470 nm). In the light of this functional evidence and because the gene is specifically expressed only in the pineal gland, we conclude that it is a pineal photosensor and name it pinopsin.
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Affiliation(s)
- T Okano
- Department of Pure and Applied Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, Japan
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Zatz M. Photoendocrine transduction in cultured chick pineal cells: IV. What do vitamin A depletion and retinaldehyde addition do to the effects of light on the melatonin rhythm? J Neurochem 1994; 62:2001-11. [PMID: 8158147 DOI: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.1994.62052001.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/29/2023]
Abstract
Light has at least two distinguishable effects on the circadian rhythm of melatonin output displayed by dispersed chick pineal cells in static culture: acute suppression of melatonin output and entrainment (phase shifts) of the underlying pacemaker. Previous results indicated that these two effects of light are mediated by different mechanistic pathways. The pathways for the acute and phase-shifting effects of light either branch from the same, single photopigment or differ from the outset, starting from separate photopigments. If a single rhodopsin-like photopigment mediates both effects of light, then vitamin A depletion and retinoid addition should affect both responses in parallel, although not proportionately. We therefore compared the effects of vitamin A depletion and retinoid addition on the acute and phase-shifting effects of light under several experimental conditions. When chick pineal cells were depleted of vitamin A, acute responses to light were markedly reduced. Addition of 11-cis-retinaldehyde specifically restored (and enhanced) the acute response. When allowed to free run in constant red light, depleted cells displayed a rhythm of melatonin output with the same period as that of control cells. In contrast to the acute effects, phase shifts in response to 2- or 4-h light pulses did not differ between depleted and control cells. Addition of retinaldehyde to depleted cells did not, by itself, reduce melatonin output or induce phase shifts. Retinaldehyde did increase the acute response to 4-h light pulses but not the ensuing phase shifts. Responses increased with duration of the light pulse: Both the acute effect and the phase shifts induced by 4-h light pulses were considerably larger than those induced by 2-h (or 1-h) light pulses. Addition of retinaldehyde to depleted cells increased the acute effect of 2-h (or 1-h) light pulses to at least that seen with 4-h light pulses but did not increase the size of the ensuing phase shifts. These results strongly confirm previous dissociations of the mechanistic pathways mediating the acute and phase-shifting effects of light on chick pineal cells. They also support a role for rhodopsin-like photopigment in the acute, but not phase-shifting, response. They favor, but do not prove, the conclusion that separate photopigments mediate the acute and entraining effects of light.
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Affiliation(s)
- M Zatz
- Section on Biochemical Pharmacology, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
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Dryer SE, Henderson D. Cyclic GMP-activated channels of the chick pineal gland: effects of divalent cations, pH, and cyclic AMP. J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol 1993; 172:271-9. [PMID: 7685388 DOI: 10.1007/bf00216609] [Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
Chick pineal cells maintained in dissociated cell culture express an intrinsic photosensitive circadian oscillator, but the mechanisms of phototransduction in avian pinealocytes are not fully understood. In this study, we have used inside-out patches to examine the characteristics of cyclic GMP-activated channels of chick pinealocytes in more detail, concentrating on the effects of factors known to modulate the secretion of melatonin and/or the function of circadian pacemakers. In most patches, the predominant conductance state was 19 pS in symmetrical 145 mM NaCl. But in some patches, a second cyclic GMP-activated channel with a unitary conductance of 29 pS was also present. The current flowing through cyclic GMP-activated channels was not affected by application of salines containing 1 microM Ca2+ to the cytoplasmic face of the patch membrane. By contrast, application of 1 mM Ca2+ caused a partial reduction in cyclic GMP-activated current at all membrane potentials. Application of 1-5 mM Mg2+ ions caused a virtually complete blockade of current at positive membrane potentials, but caused only a small decrease in current at negative membrane potentials. No obvious differences in the gating of cyclic GMP-activated channels were observed in pH 8.2, 7.4 or 6.2 salines. Application of salines containing 100 microM, 500 microM, or 1 mM cyclic AMP did not cause activation of the channels, but 5 mM cyclic AMP evoked a low level of channel activity. Application of 5 mM but not 100 microM cyclic AMP decreased the probability of channel activation caused by 20-100 microM cyclic GMP and also increased the percentage of openings to an 11 pS subconductance state. Thus, cyclic AMP acts as a weak partial agonist. Nevertheless, the gating of these channels does not seem to be controlled directly by physiologically relevant changes in intracellular Ca2+, pH, or cyclic AMP.
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Affiliation(s)
- S E Dryer
- Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee 32306
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Vigh-Teichmann I, Vigh B. Immunocytochemistry and calcium cytochemistry of the mammalian pineal organ: A comparison with retina and submammalian pineal organs. Microsc Res Tech 1992; 21:227-41. [PMID: 1351408 DOI: 10.1002/jemt.1070210306] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/09/2022]
Abstract
Morphologically the mammalian pineal organ is a part of the diencephalon. It represents a neural tissue histologically ("pineal nervous tissue") and is dissimilar to endocrine glands. Submammalian pinealocytes resemble the photoreceptor cells of the retina, and some of their cytologic characteristics are preserved in the mammalian pinealocytes together with compounds demonstrable by cyto- and immunocytochemistry and participating in photochemical transduction. In our opinion, the main trend of today's literature on pineal functions--only considering the organ as a common endocrine gland--deviates from this structural and histochemical basis. In mammals, similar to the lower vertebrates, the pinealocytes have a sensory cilium developed to a different extent. The axonic processes of pinealocytes form ribbon-containing synapses on secondary pineal neurons, and/or neurohormonal terminals on the basal lamina of the surface of the pineal nervous tissue facing the perivascular spaces. Ribbon-containing axo-dendritic synapses were found in the rat, cat, guinea pig, ferret, and hedgehog. In the cat, we found GABA-immunoreactive interneurons, while the secondary nerve cells, whose axons enter the habenular commissure, were GABA-immunonegative. GABA-immunogold-labeled axons run between pinealocytes and form axo-dendritic synapses on intrapineal neurons. There is a similarity between the light and electron microscopic localization of Ca ions in the mammalian and submammalian pineal organs and retina of various vertebrates. Calcium pyroantimonate deposits--showing the presence of Ca ions--were found in the outer segments of the pineal and retinal photoreceptors of the frog. In the rat and human pineal organ, calcium accumulated on the plasmalemma of pinealocytes and intercellularly among pinealocytes. The formation of pineal concrements in mammals may be connected to the high need for Ca exchange of the pinealocytes for their supposed receptor and effector functions.
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Affiliation(s)
- I Vigh-Teichmann
- Neuroendocrine Section, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Semmelweis University Medical School, Budapest
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Zatz M, Mullen DA. Two mechanisms of photoendocrine transduction in cultured chick pineal cells: pertussis toxin blocks the acute but not the phase-shifting effects of light on the melatonin rhythm. Brain Res 1988; 453:63-71. [PMID: 3401779 DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(88)90143-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 60] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
We have recently described a system, using dispersed chick pineal cells in static culture, which displays a persistent, photosensitive, circadian rhythm of melatonin release. Light has two apparent effects on this melatonin rhythm: the first is an acute inhibition of melatonin output, the second is entrainment of the underlying pacemaker. These two effects could be mediated by the same or different mechanisms. Pertussis toxin, which acts to block the function of transducin and certain other G-proteins, blocked the acute effects of light on chick pineal cells, but not the ability of light pulses to induce phase-dependent phase shifts of the rhythm. There must, therefore, be at least two mechanistic pathways by which light affects chick pineal melatonin production. Transducin or other pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins would appear to be involved in the acute effects of light on the melatonin-synthesizing apparatus, but not in the effects of light on the circadian pacemaker which generates the melatonin rhythm. Some plausible pertussis toxin-sensitive mechanisms are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- M Zatz
- Laboratory of Cell Biology, NIMH, Bethesda, MD 20892
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