Environmental induction of photononresponsiveness in the Siberian hamster, Phodopus sungorus

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Abstract

In seasonally breeding rodent species, a fraction of the population is unresponsive to short day lengths (DL) and remains reproductively competent during winter. We previously observed that incidence of nonresponsiveness to short days was affected by photoperiodic history. Here we tested whether exposure to long DL (18 h light/day; 18L) renders animals unresponsive to short DL (10L). Hamsters, maintained from birth in 10L, were transferred at week 6 to 18L or 14L. Ten weeks later (week 16), groups were transferred to 10L for 10 wk. All hamsters maintained in short DL from birth had undeveloped testes at week 6. At week 26, however, 92% of hamsters previously kept in 18L failed to undergo complete gonadal regression in 10L, compared with only 10% of hamsters previously in 14L. Entrainment of locomotor activity in 10L in nonresponsive hamsters resembled that typically observed under long DL. Exposure to 18L may induce nonresponsiveness by altering interactions of component circadian oscillators that mediate gonadal regression in short DL.

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Gorman, M. R., & Zucker, I. (1997). Environmental induction of photononresponsiveness in the Siberian hamster, Phodopus sungorus. American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 272(3 41-3). https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.1997.272.3.r887

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