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Journal ArticleDOI

Extrapineal melatonin: analysis of its subcellular distribution and daily fluctuations

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TLDR
In this article, the subcellular levels of melatonin in cerebral cortex and liver of rats under several conditions were studied, and it was shown that melatonin levels in the cell membrane, cytosol, nucleus, and mitochondrion vary over a 24-hr cycle, although these variations do not exhibit circadian rhythms.
Abstract
We studied the subcellular levels of melatonin in cerebral cortex and liver of rats under several conditions. The results show that melatonin levels in the cell membrane, cytosol, nucleus, and mitochondrion vary over a 24-hr cycle, although these variations do not exhibit circadian rhythms. The cell membrane has the highest concentration of melatonin followed by mitochondria, nucleus, and cytosol. Pinealectomy significantly increased the content of melatonin in all subcellular compartments, whereas luzindole treatment had little effect on melatonin levels. Administration of 10 mg/kg bw melatonin to sham-pinealectomized, pinealectomized, or continuous light-exposed rats increased the content of melatonin in all subcellular compartments. Melatonin in doses ranging from 40 to 200 mg/kg bw increased in a dose-dependent manner the accumulation of melatonin on cell membrane and cytosol, although the accumulations were 10 times greater in the former than in the latter. Melatonin levels in the nucleus and mitochondria reached saturation with a dose of 40 mg/kg bw; higher doses of injected melatonin did not further cause additional accumulation of melatonin in these organelles. The results suggest some control of extrapineal accumulation or extrapineal production of melatonin and support the existence of regulatory mechanisms in cellular organelles, which prevent the intracellular equilibration of the indolamine. Seemingly, different concentrations of melatonin can be maintained in different subcellular compartments. The data also seem to support a requirement of high doses of melatonin to obtain therapeutic effects. Together, these results add information that assists in explaining the physiology and pharmacology of melatonin.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin as an antioxidant: under promises but over delivers.

TL;DR: It is the current feeling of the authors that, in view of the widely diverse beneficial functions that have been reported for melatonin, these may be merely epiphenomena of the more fundamental, yet‐to‐be identified basic action(s) of this ancient molecule.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extrapineal melatonin: sources, regulation, and potential functions.

TL;DR: The presence of melatonin in extrapineal organs, tissues, and fluids of mammals including humans is emphasized and information related to its peripheral production and regulation of this ubiquitously acting indoleamine is compiled.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin: an ancient molecule that makes oxygen metabolically tolerable.

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the initial and primary function of melatonin in photosynthetic cyanobacteria, which appeared on Earth 3.5–3.2 billion years ago, was as an antioxidant and that the melatonin‐synthesizing actions of the engulfed bacteria were retained when these organelles became mitochondria and chloroplasts, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin: a well‐documented antioxidant with conditional pro‐oxidant actions

TL;DR: Although the vast majority of studies proved the antioxidant capacity of melatonin and its derivatives, a few studies using cultured cells found that melatonin promoted the generation of ROS at pharmacological concentrations in several tumor and nontumor cells; thus, melatonin functioned as a conditional pro‐oxidant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin promotes water‐stress tolerance, lateral root formation, and seed germination in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.)

TL;DR: The results suggest that the adverse effects of water stress can be minimized by the application of melatonin, and specifically on strengthening cucumber roots.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding

TL;DR: This assay is very reproducible and rapid with the dye binding process virtually complete in approximately 2 min with good color stability for 1 hr with little or no interference from cations such as sodium or potassium nor from carbohydrates such as sucrose.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dose translation from animal to human studies revisited

TL;DR: BSA correlates well across several mammalian species with several parameters of biology, including oxygen utilization, caloric expenditure, basal metabolism, blood volume, circulating plasma proteins, and renal function, and is advocated as a factor when converting a dose for translation from animals to humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pineal Melatonin: Cell Biology of Its Synthesis and of Its Physiological Interactions*

TL;DR: The pineal gland can be rapidly removed from rodents with minimal damage to adjacent neural structures using a specially designed trephine, and since the mid 1960s, research on the gland has become a very active area of investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circadian Integration of Metabolism and Energetics

TL;DR: Advances in understanding the interrelationship among circadian disruption, sleep deprivation, obesity, and diabetes are reviewed and implications for rational therapeutics for these conditions are reviewed.
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