Periodic mother deprivation during the light period reversed the phase of serotonin N-acetyltransferase activity rhythm of the pineal gland in rat pups

1993 
Abstract It has been reported that nursing mother rats can postnatally entrain the circadian rhythms of blinded rat pups, such as locomotor, drinking, and corticosterone rhythms. To gain more insight in the mechanism of the postnatal entrainment of such pup's circadian rhythms, we examined the serotonin N -acetyltransferase (NAT) activity rhythm in blinded rat pups subjected to periodic mother deprivation (PMD) in which mothers were periodically deprived of their pups during either half of a day. We found that only PMD during the light period shifted the phase of NAT activity rhythm in the pups. To cause a reversal of the NAT activity rhythm, it was necessary to repeat PMD for more than 6 days. PMD for 6 h each day also shifted the phase of the blinded rat pups, but it did not reverse the NAT rhythm, even when it was repeated for 10 days. In 9-h deprivation for 10 days, however, deprivation during the first 9 h of the light period reversed the phase, although the latter 9 h failed to cause reversal of the phase. On the other hand, restricted feeding of the mother took more than 11 days to reverse the phase and a foster mother in the cross-fostering experiment failed to affect the phase of pup's rhythm, when the rhythm was determined on the 11th postnatal day. These facts indicate that PMD during the light period is a potent entrainer of the pup's circadian NAT rhythms and provide a useful method of exploring the underlying mechanism of the entrainment of the pup's rhythm by the mother.
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