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Serum concentrations of melatonin in prepubertal or postpubertal gilts exposed to artificial lighting or sunlight

To determine if the type of environmental lighting or reproductive status influences secretory patterns of serum melatonin, gilts were exposed to artificial light or full sunlight during the summer months. In Experiment 1, eight prepubertal and eight postpubertal gilts (Hampshire × Yorkshire × Duroc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Theriogenology 1997-03, Vol.47 (4), p.923-928
Main Authors: Diekman, M.A., Green, M.L.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:To determine if the type of environmental lighting or reproductive status influences secretory patterns of serum melatonin, gilts were exposed to artificial light or full sunlight during the summer months. In Experiment 1, eight prepubertal and eight postpubertal gilts (Hampshire × Yorkshire × Duroc) were exposed to light intensity of 700 lux in an environmentally controlled room from 0730 to 1900 h daily. An additional eight prepubertal and eight postpubertal gilts were reared outdoors in an open modified-front gestation building and fed on a concrete apron outdoors where light intensity approached 50,000 lux in full sunlight. After 2 mo of acclimating to these environmental conditions, blood samples were drawn from each gilt at 2-h intervals from 1000 to 0200 h. Serum concentrations of melatonin were assayed utilizing Guildhay antisera. The experiment was repeated during the same months of the following year utilizing different gilts (Experiment 2). During both replications, neither light intensity nor reproductive status affected the secretory patterns of melatonin during the sampling period (P >0.05). In both prepubertal and postpubertal gilts, serum concentrations of melatonin were not reduced (P >0.05) by exposure to direct sunlight. Since baseline concentrations of serum melatonin were not reduced by sunlight during the day, the incidence of nocturnal rises of melatonin was not increased (P >0.05) in either prepubertal or postpubertal gilts.
ISSN:0093-691X
1879-3231
DOI:10.1016/S0093-691X(97)00047-2