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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 1, 1998, 18(19):8032-8037
Melatonin Entrains the Restored Circadian Activity Rhythms of
Syrian Hamsters Bearing Fetal Suprachiasmatic Nucleus Grafts
Julia
Grosse and
Fred C.
Davis
Department of Biology, Northeastern University, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115
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ABSTRACT |
A circadian pacemaker consists of at least three essential
features: the ability to generate circadian oscillations, an output signal, and the ability to be entrained by external signals. In rodents, ablation of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) results in the
loss of circadian rhythms in activity. Rhythmicity can be restored by
transplanting fetal SCN into the brain of the lesioned animal,
demonstrating the first two of the essential pacemaker features within
the grafts. External signals, such as the light/dark cycle, have not,
however, been shown to entrain the restored rhythms. Melatonin
injections are an effective entraining stimulus in fetal and neonatal
Syrian hamsters of the same developmental ages used to provide donor
tissue for transplantation. Therefore, melatonin was used to test the
hypothesis that SCN grafts contain an entrainable pacemaker. Daily
injections of melatonin were given to SCN-lesioned hosts beginning on
the day after transplantation of fetal SCN. Two groups that received
melatonin at different times of day 12 hr apart each showed
significantly clustered phases but with average phases that differed by
8.67 hr. Thus melatonin was able to entrain the restored circadian
activity rhythms. In contrast to these initial injections, injections
given 6 weeks after transplantation were unable to entrain or phase
shift the rhythms. The results demonstrate that SCN grafts contain an
entrainable circadian pacemaker. In addition, the results also indicate
that the fetal SCN is directly sensitive to melatonin and, as with
intact hamsters, sensitivity to melatonin is lost during SCN
development.
Key words:
suprachiasmatic nucleus; graft; circadian rhythm; transplantation; pineal; melatonin
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INTRODUCTION |
Mammalian circadian rhythms are
regulated by a pacemaker within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of
the hypothalamus (Klein et al. 1991 ). In rats and Syrian hamsters
ablation of the SCN abolishes circadian activity and rest rhythms,
which can be restored by transplantation of fetal SCN tissue
(Drucker-Colin et al., 1984 ; Lehman et al., 1987 ; DeCoursey and Buggy,
1988 ). In addition, the period of the restored rhythm is characteristic
of the donor's genotype (Ralph et al., 1990 ), demonstrating that the
transplanted tissue contains the circadian timing mechanism. Although
these studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of transplants in restoring activity rhythms, and in one case a humoral rhythm (Earnest et al., 1989 ), neither the entrainment of restored rhythms by light nor
the restoration of photoperiodic responses has been observed (Lehman et
al., 1987 ; Matsumoto et al., 1996 ). Thus it has not been known whether
transplanted SCN retains the ability to be entrained. It is possible
that cells capable of generating circadian oscillations and producing
an output signal survive transplantation but that cells or mechanisms
required for entrainment do not.
The possibility that melatonin might serve as an entraining signal for
SCN grafts was suggested by the finding that prenatal injections to
pregnant hamsters entrained the activity rhythms expressed by the pups
after weaning (Davis and Mannion, 1988 ). More recently, daily melatonin
injections given directly to newborn hamsters were also shown to cause
entrainment (Grosse et al., 1996 ). These findings, together with
evidence for melatonin receptors in the fetal and newborn hamster SCN
(Duncan and Davis, 1993 ), suggest that the fetal and newborn hamster
SCN are targets for melatonin. In transplantation studies, SCN from
either fetuses or newborn hamsters are transplanted. Thus, if the
direct action of melatonin on the intact fetal and neonatal SCN is
sufficient to cause entrainment, and an entrainable pacemaker is
present in grafts, then melatonin should entrain rhythms restored by
transplanted SCN. A preliminary study, which examined the effects of
melatonin on hamsters with SCN grafts, in fact suggested that rhythms
restored by transplantation could respond to an external entraining cue (Romero and Silver, 1989 ). Other evidence indicated that the
rhythmicity of an intact host can influence metabolic activity within
grafts (Servière et al., 1994 ).
The first aim of the present study was to determine whether melatonin
injections could entrain the activity rhythms of hamsters bearing newly
implanted SCN grafts. Second, because the ability of melatonin to
entrain the rhythms of neonatal hamsters is lost after postnatal day 5 (P5) (Grosse et al., 1996 ), and melatonin binding site density falls
during postnatal development (Duncan and Davis, 1993 ), the effect of
melatonin injections on more established grafts was also examined. If
the ability of melatonin to entrain the SCN disappears during the
maturation of grafts, this would suggest that the loss during normal
development is part of a program intrinsic to the grafted tissue rather
than to changes that normally occur elsewhere in the developing animal,
such as the appearance of the pup's own pineal melatonin rhythm
(Rollag and Stetson, 1981 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. Adult (8-week-old) male and female Syrian
hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) were obtained from Charles
River Laboratories (Kingston, NY) and maintained on a 14/10 hr
light/dark cycle (lights off at 1600 hr Eastern Standard Time) with
food and water available ad libitum. To obtain fetal tissue
for transplantation, estrous cycles of females were monitored by daily
examination of the vaginal discharge, and animals were mated overnight
on the night of ovulation. Fertilization was assumed to have occurred
midway through the dark portion of the light/dark cycle, and the 24 hr
after mating was designated embryonic day 1 (E1). To ensure that the
donor fetuses received no circadian cues before transplantation,
pregnant females were transferred to dim constant light (dim LL, <2
lux) at the time of lights off on E1 and on E7 received electrolytic lesions of the SCN (see Surgery).
Activity recording. Activity rhythms were monitored in dim
LL by housing animals individually in cages equipped with a running wheel. Wheel revolutions were recorded by closure of a microswitch mounted on the cage and collected and stored in 10 min bins using Datacol 3 software (Minimitter, Sunriver, OR). Display and analysis of
activity recordings were performed using Circadia software (Behavioral
Cybernetics, Cambridge, MA). Estimates of free-running period to a
resolution of ±5 min were made by adjusting the folding period of the
actogram until vertical alignment of successive activity bouts was
achieved.
Surgery. Pregnant females and both male and female host
animals received electrolytic lesions of the SCN. Animals were
anaesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (100 mg/kg) and placed in a
stereotaxic frame. An electrode (platinum iridium, OD insulated except
for 0.3 mm at the tip) was lowered at the midline to a point 8.3 mm below the skull surface and 0.6 mm anterior to bregma (incisor bar 2 mm
below ear bar). With a subcutaneous cathode, a current of 4 mA was
passed for 10 sec. Pregnant females were then returned to dim LL until
transplantation on E14. Recipient animals were also transferred to dim
LL and housed individually in cages equipped with a running wheel for
recording of activity rhythms. Any animal that subsequently displayed a
rhythmic pattern of activity and rest was removed from the study.
Two to 3 weeks after receiving SCN lesions, SCN-lesioned hosts received
grafts of hypothalamic tissue obtained from fetuses collected on E14.
Pregnant hamsters received a lethal dose of sodium pentobarbital, their
fetuses were rapidly removed and decapitated, and the brains were
dissected into Geys balanced salt solution (Life Technologies, Grand
Island, NY). The fetal brains were then transferred to 67% Eagle's
basal medium and 33% Earle's balanced salt solution at room
temperature. A block of tissue containing the optic chiasm and SCN
region of the hypothalamus was dissected from the brains and used for
transplantation within 90 min.
Recipients of grafts were anaesthetized and placed in the stereotaxic
frame. A glass micropipette (Wiretrol II; Drummond Scientific, Broomall, PA) was used to take up one block of donor tissue containing both SCN from a single fetus (a volume of <1 µl) and was lowered through the hole previously drilled for the SCN lesion to a point ~8
mm below the dural surface. The plunger was held in place while the
pipette was withdrawn, leaving the graft in the brain. Animals were
returned to wheel-running cages in dim LL and activity recording continued. In all, five or six fetuses from eight litters were used (44 transplants in total).
Protocol. Of the host animals that received SCN lesions, 44 (75%) were arrhythmic and received grafts (15 females and 29 males). A
total of eight donor litters were used, with four different donor
litters contributing tissue to each treatment group. Hosts were divided
into two treatment groups. Group 1 (6 females and 16 males) received
melatonin injections (25 µg in 200 µl of 0.1% ethanolic saline) at
0900 hr and vehicle (0.1% ethanolic saline) injections at 2100 hr for
7 d beginning on the day after transplantation. Group 2 (9 females
and 13 males) received vehicle injection at 0900 hr and melatonin
injection at 2100 hr daily for the 7 d after transplantation.
After injections were completed, the hamsters were left undisturbed
while activity recording continued for another 5 weeks. Hosts that had
not shown restoration of robust circadian rhythmicity by this time were
removed from the experiment. Ultimately, both groups consisted of 12 hamsters, with 4 females and 8 males in each. Included in the final
groups were hosts that had received tissue from each of the eight donor
litters; i.e., all donor litters contributed viable grafts to the
study.
To examine the response to melatonin and vehicle injection in hosts
with grafts that had become well established, the animals that showed
the most robust rhythms 5 weeks after transplantation received a second
set of injections. Hamsters received injections of either melatonin
(n = 6; 3 from each of groups 1 and 2) or vehicle
(n = 5; 3 from group 1 and 2 from group 2) at 1100 hr for 5 consecutive days. The injections fell at different circadian times in different animals (see Results). Activity recording was continued for a further 10 d after the final injection to assess any phase shift that may have occurred. All animals were then perfused,
and the brains were processed for immunocytochemical detection of
vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP).
Data analysis and statistics. The phase of activity onset of
restored rhythms was determined for the first day after a set of
injections. For the initial set of injections phase was assessed by
three observers (two with no knowledge of the experimental groups) with
eye fit lines through at least 3 weeks of activity onsets. The eye fit
lines were extrapolated back to the day after the last injection. In
all cases, the estimates of phase were within 2 hr of each other. Where
estimates differed, the median of the three estimates was used. Phases
were plotted on a circle representing the 24 hr of the day after the
last injection. The average phase for a given group was calculated by
vector addition, with the length of the average vector, r,
representing the scatter among phases. The Rayleigh test was used to
determine whether the distribution of phases within a group was
significantly different from uniform, and the Mardia-Watson-Wheeler
test determined whether there was a difference between the distribution
of the two groups (Batschelet, 1972 ). Any phase shift and/or
entrainment caused by the injections given after the establishment of
restored rhythms was assessed by comparing actual and predicted onsets
(determined by eye fit lines) on the day after the last of the five
injections.
Immunocytochemistry. The extent of SCN lesions and the
presence of SCN tissue within grafts were assessed at the end of the experiment by immunoreactivity for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP-IR). Animals received an overdose of sodium pentobarbital and were
perfused intracardially with 0.01 M PBS containing 25,000 U/l heparin, followed by 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.01 M PBS
(PFA). Brains were removed and post-fixed for 2 hr in PFA and then
cryoprotected overnight in 20% sucrose-PBS. Sixty micrometer coronal
sections through the graft and lesion sites were cut on a freezing
microtome, and free-floating sections were then processed for VIP-IR.
Sections were treated for 10 min in 0.5% H2O2
and then rinsed in 0.01 M PBS and incubated overnight at
4°C in 0.01 M PBS, 1% bovine serum albumen, and 0.3%
Triton X-100 containing anti-VIP antibody (1:5000; Peninsula
Laboratories, Belmont, CA) and 2% normal goat serum. Detection of
primary antiserum was achieved using the Vectastain Elite
avidin-biotin complex method (Vector Laboratories) and visualized using diaminobenzidine.
 |
RESULTS |
Restoration of circadian rhythmicity sufficiently robust to assess
phase of activity onset was achieved in 54.5% of hosts (55.2% of
males and 53.3% of females). The mean period ± SEM of restored
rhythms was 24.05 ± 0.04 hr (24.06 hr in males and 24.04 hr in
females). Figures 1 and
2 show examples of actograms from two
animals from each of the experimental groups. Histological assessment
confirmed that animals that were arrhythmic after SCN lesion had no
VIP-IR in the SCN region of the hypothalamus. Additionally, the brains
of all animals that showed restoration of circadian rhythms had VIP-IR
graft tissue, generally located in the anterior hypothalamus, above or
within the third ventricle. Figure 3
shows photomicrographs of lesions and grafts from hosts in both
experimental groups.

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Figure 1.
Double-plotted actograms of two hamsters that
received melatonin injections in the morning (circles) and
vehicle (diamonds) in the evening (group 1) for 7 d
immediately after transplantation (T). The hamsters also
received injections (as indicated) 6 weeks after transplantation. The
heavy vertical lines are the eye fit lines used to estimate
the phases of activity onset on the day after the initial set of
injections (top end of the line).
Asterisks on the time scales at the tops of the
actograms also indicate the phases. Eye fit lines before and after the
later set of injections were used to assess the effects of the
injections. In most cases these two lines appear as a single line,
because no shifts or changes in period occurred. The VIP-immunoreactive
grafts of animals A and B are shown in Figure 3, A and
B.
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Figure 2.
Double-plotted actograms of two hamsters that
received melatonin injections in the evening (circles) and
vehicle (diamonds) in the morning (group 2) for 7 days
immediately after transplantation (T). The hamsters also
received injections (as indicated) 6 weeks after transplantation. The
heavy vertical lines are the eye fit lines used to estimate
the phases of activity onset on the day after the initial set of
injections (top end of the line).
Asterisks on the time scales at the tops of the
actograms also indicate the phases. Eye fit lines before and after the
later set of injections were used to assess the effects of the later
injections. Record B shows an advance phase shift in
response to vehicle injections. The VIP-immunoreactive grafts of
animals A and B are shown in Figure 3, C and
D.
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Figure 3.
Photomicrographs of coronal sections that
contained grafted tissue with VIP immunoreactivity (arrows)
in four of the hamsters from the study. Lesions of the host SCN can
also be seen in A and D. Och, Optic chiasm;
3V, third ventricle.
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The phases of activity onset on the day after the first set of
injections are shown in Figure 4. The
mean phase of activity onset of the hamsters in group 1 was 0030 hr
(8.5 hr before the time of melatonin injection at 0900 hr), and that of
Group 2 was 0910 hr (11.83 hr before the time of melatonin injection at
2100 hr), a difference of 8.67 hr. The distribution of phases for each group was significantly clustered (group 1, r = 0.67;
group 2, r = 0.89; p < 0.01 in both
groups, Rayleigh test). There was also a significant difference between
the distributions of the two groups (p < 0.01, Mardia-Watson-Wheeler test). Thus melatonin injections given at
opposite times of day to hamsters bearing newly implanted SCN grafts
were able to entrain the restored rhythms to different phases.

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Figure 4.
Phases of activity onset on the day after the
final injection for all animals plotted on a circle representing the 24 hr of that day. Open circles represent individual animals
that received melatonin in the morning and vehicle in the evening
(group 1), and closed circles represent animals that
received vehicle in the morning and melatonin in the evening (group 2).
The average phase for each group is shown by the arrows
within the circle (open arrow, group 1;
closed arrow, group 2), and the degree of synchrony within
each group is represented by the length of the
arrows and by the value of r. Arrows
outside the circle indicate the times of the
injections.
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In 10 of the 11 hosts tested, a second series of melatonin or vehicle
injections delivered 6 weeks after transplantation failed to induce
either phase shifts or entrainment to the injections (Figs. 1 and 2).
The circadian times (CTs, with activity onset as CT 12) at which the
first of the five injections occurred for the hamsters that received
melatonin were 9, 17, 18, 22, 23, and 24, and for those that received
vehicle were 6, 11, 12, 17, and 21.5. The only hamster that showed a
phase shift did so in response to vehicle injections at CT 11 (Fig.
2B). Thus melatonin did not entrain or phase shift
the activity rhythms of hamsters with well-established SCN grafts.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Injections of melatonin to SCN-lesioned adult hamsters bearing
newly implanted fetal SCN grafts entrained the restored circadian activity rhythms. In particular, significantly different average phases
were established by injections given at different times of day.
Melatonin must have caused the difference in average phase, because the
hosts and the donor tissues were all treated identically in the two
groups except for the timing of melatonin exposure; all hosts received
injections twice a day, and all donor tissues came from fetuses of
SCN-lesioned dams that were maintained under the same conditions.
Entrainment of the restored rhythms with injections given immediately
after transplantation indicates that circadian oscillations were being
generated during this time, within 7 d of E14, the age of the
tissue when transplanted. The results also suggest that the fetal and
neonatal hypothalami are direct targets of melatonin. It seems unlikely
that synaptic communication between potential melatonin targets within
the host (Morgan et al., 1994 ) and the graft would have been
established within 7 d after transplantation. Furthermore,
although the presence of melatonin receptors within grafts has not been
examined, the presence of receptors in intact fetal and neonatal SCN
(Duncan and Davis, 1993 ) suggests that receptors would be present in
grafts. It cannot be excluded, however, that a humoral signal from the
host to the graft mediates indirect effects of the injections. In
addition, although the dose of melatonin used (25 µg) is commonly
used in reproductive studies, such an injection produces serum levels
three orders of magnitude above physiological levels (Maywood et al.,
1993 ). Thus it is not known whether the entrainment observed here is a
physiological effect of melatonin.
In contrast to the effects of injections given immediately after
transplantation, a second set of injections given 6 weeks after
transplantation had no measurable effect on the phase of the rhythms.
Although it is possible that melatonin injections given over >5 d
could at some phases cause entrainment, any such effect on established
grafts would have to be much smaller than the effects on perinatal
grafts. That is, it is likely that the melatonin injections given
immediately after transplantation fell at a wide range of phases of the
oscillations generated within the grafts; melatonin was given at two
times of day, and the phases of oscillations within different grafts
were likely to have been initially scattered, because they came from
fetuses of SCN-lesioned dams (Davis and Gorski, 1988 ). Despite this
wide range of initial phases, the groups became clustered after only
7 d of injections. Thus in at least some of the grafts large phase
shifts must have been produced. In contrast, no phase shifts in
response to five melatonin injections were observed when given 6 weeks
after transplantation.
The apparent loss in sensitivity to melatonin in grafts is consistent
with a loss observed in hamster pups; entrainment of hamster pups can
be achieved with injections on P1-P5 but not with injections on
P6-P10 (Grosse et al., 1996 ). It is possible that the normal loss in
sensitivity to melatonin is part of a developmental program intrinsic
to the SCN; the loss occurred in the grafts despite isolation from the
rest of the developing animal. Plausible hypotheses for the loss of
sensitivity in intact pups, such as synaptogenesis of retinal afferents
or the onset of the pup's own pineal melatonin rhythm, are less
plausible, because neither of these would have occurred for the grafts.
On the other hand, other afferents from the host are likely to
innervate the grafts and could influence its development in ways
similar to what might occur during normal development (Lehman et al., 1987 ; Botchkina and Morin, 1993 , 1995 ; Ueda et al., 1995 , 1996 ).
The average phase of entrainment achieved by melatonin injections in
this study differed from that seen after injections to neonatal
hamsters (Grosse et al., 1996 ). In neonates, the average phase of
activity onset after weaning was almost coincident with the time at
which the melatonin injections were given. The age of the neonates in
that study was P1-P5 during the injections, similar to the age of the
grafts in the present study (approximately E15-P6). However, in the
present study, the average phase (both groups combined) occurred 10 hr
before the injection so that the melatonin was closer to being
coincident with the end of activity rather than the onset of activity.
The reason for this difference is unclear. The dose of melatonin used
in the current study was the same per gram of body weight as that used
by Grosse et al. (1996) , and because melatonin distributes rapidly
through tissues, it is unlikely that there would have been a lag of
several hours before the melatonin reached the grafts. A better
explanation may be that melatonin actually entrains the pacemaker in
the same way in both situations, but that the phase relationship
between the pacemaker within the SCN and the expressed activity is
different. For example, if in one situation activity onset was linked
to CT 12 (intact pups) but in the other to CT 0 (graft/host), then the
expressed rhythms would have opposite phases. Rhythms restored by
transplantation often show bimodal patterns in which it is ambiguous as
to which of two opposite phases should be considered activity onset
(Lehman et al., 1987 ; Davis and Viswanathan, 1996 ). It is possible that
abnormal communication between the grafted SCN and the host brain
target tissues could affect the relationship between pacemaker output
signals and the response of downstream systems. For example, the output
of grafts may depend entirely on humoral signals (Silver et al., 1996 ),
whereas SCN output in intact hamsters might include specific synaptic
connectivity. Interestingly, abnormal communication by grafts would
not, in this hypothesis, simply introduce variability in phase or
ambiguity between two possible choices but would have to be
consistently different in some way so that similar phases among the
restored rhythms of a particular treatment group are observed.
Because in the present study activity onset of the restored rhythms was
closer to coinciding with the time of the vehicle-only injections than
with the time of the melatonin injections, it is tempting to suggest
that the vehicle, not melatonin, caused the entrainment. This, however,
cannot be. Both injection times included vehicle, and although it is
possible that the vehicle has an effect that is either enhanced or
reduced by melatonin, melatonin must have had an effect that was
responsible for the phase difference between the experimental groups.
Furthermore, in a previous study by Grosse et al. (1996) , pups received
single injections of either melatonin or vehicle only each day, and the vehicle-only injections did not cause entrainment.
The lack of entrainment or phase shifts after the second set of
melatonin injections suggests that an established SCN graft behaves in
a manner similar to the mature, intact SCN despite the abnormal
environment in which it developed. Intact adult hamsters will show
advance phase shifts in response to a melatonin or vehicle-only injection when the injection is given at approximately CT 9-11 (Mead
et al., 1992 ), but there is no specific effect of melatonin over and
above that of vehicle only (Hastings et al., 1992 ). The only hamster in
the present study that showed any response to the second set of
injections was injected with vehicle at CT 11 and showed a phase
advance. This suggests that hamsters bearing grafts can respond to
nonphotic stimuli in a manner similar to that of intact animals.
Although Matsumoto et al. (1996) did not see a robust effect of the
benzodiazepene triazolam on the restore rhythms of hamsters with SCN
grafts, a small number of animals did show phase shifts. Further
studies are needed to firmly establish whether mature grafts can
respond to a nonphotic stimulus.
Overall, the present results demonstrate that an SCN graft includes
three essential features of a circadian pacemaker: circadian timing, an
output signal, and the ability to become entrained. In addition, the
results support the hypothesis that melatonin is involved in
communicating time-of-day information from the mother to the fetus. The
results indicate that the fetal hamster SCN is a direct target for
entrainment by melatonin and that this sensitivity to melatonin is
transient, disappearing as a result of developmental changes intrinsic
to the SCN. In addition to the entrainment demonstrated by these
results, melatonin might also have an effect on SCN development.
Rhythms appeared to have been restored more rapidly in the present
study than in previous studies from this laboratory, and a similar
observation was made in a preliminary study from another laboratory
(Romero and Silver, 1989 ). In the present study, the appropriate direct
comparisons to address this question were not available, and the
question of whether melatonin has an organizational effect on the
developing SCN, in addition to entrainment, will require further
studies.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 26, 1998; revised July 16, 1998; accepted July 17, 1998.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant HD18686
to F.C.D.
Correspondence should be addressed to Fred C. Davis, Department of
Biology, 414 Mugar Life Sciences Building, Northeastern University,
Boston, MA 02115.
 |
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