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Journal ArticleDOI

Nuclear localization of melatonin in different mammalian tissues: Immunocytochemical and radioimmunoassay evidence

TLDR
The results of these studies suggest that melatonin may interact with nuclear proteins and that the indole may have an important function at the nuclear level in a variety of mammalian tissues.
Abstract
Melatonin was detected by an improved immunocytochemical technique in the cell nuclei of most tissues studied including several brain areas, pineal gland, Harderian gland, gut, liver, kidney, and spleen from rodents and primates. Cryostat sections from tissues fixed in Bouin's fluid, formalin, or acetone/ethanol were used. The nuclear staining appeared primarily associated with the chromatin. The nucleoli did not exhibit a positive reaction. The melatonin antiserum was used in the range of 1:500 to 1:5,000. Incubation of the antibody with an excess of melatonin resulted in the complete blockade of nuclear staining. Pretreatment of the sections with proteinase K (200-1,000 ng/ml) prevented the positive immunoreaction. In a second aspect of the study, we estimated the concentration of melatonin by means of radioimmunoassay in the nuclear fraction of several tissues including cerebral cortex, liver, and gut. The subcutaneous injection of melatonin (500 micrograms/kg) to rats resulted, after 30 min, in a rapid increase in the nuclear concentration of immunoreactive melatonin which varied in a tissue-dependent manner. However, samples collected 3 h after the injection showed that melatonin levels had decreased to control values. Pinealectomy in rats resulted in a clear reduction in the nuclear content of melatonin in the cerebral cortex and liver but not in the gut. The results of these studies suggest that melatonin may interact with nuclear proteins and that the indole may have an important function at the nuclear level in a variety of mammalian tissues.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of antioxidant enzymes: a significant role for melatonin.

TL;DR: This report reviews the studies which document the influence of melatonin on the activity and expression of the antioxidative enzymes glutathione peroxidase, superoxide dismutases and catalase both under physiological and under conditions of elevated oxidative stress and analyses the possible mechanisms by which melatonin regulates these enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin as a natural ally against oxidative stress: a physicochemical examination

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the current progress in understanding the physicochemical insights related to the free radical-scavenging activity of melatonin and concludes that melatonin efficiently protects against oxidative stress by a variety of mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative damage in the central nervous system: protection by melatonin.

TL;DR: Melatonin has been shown prophylactically to reduce amyloid beta protein toxicity of Alzheimer's disease, to reduce oxidative damage in several models of Parkinson's disease and to protect against glutamate excitotoxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative processes and antioxidative defense mechanisms in the aging brain.

TL;DR: A newly discovered, potentially highly important antioxidant in the brain is the indole melatonin, which is more effective than glutathione in scavenging the highly toxic hydroxyl radical and also more efficient than vitamin E in neutralizing the peroxyl radical.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the evidence supporting melatonin's role as an antioxidant

TL;DR: Melatonin is remarkably potent in protecting against free radical damage induced by a variety of means, and DNA damage resulting from either the exposure of animals to the chemical carcinogen safrole or to ionizing radiation is markedly reduced when melatonin is co‐administered.
References
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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

The Pineal and Its Hormones in the Control of Reproduction in Mammals

Russel J. Reiter
- 01 Apr 1980 - 
TL;DR: By the usual criteria in endocrinology, the pineal now fulfills all the qualifications of an organ of internal secretion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The melatonin rhythm: both a clock and a calendar.

TL;DR: The paper summarizes the 3 patterns of nocturnal melatonin production that have been described and shows that the circadian production and secretion of melatonin by the pineal gland can impart both daily and seasonal, i.e., calendar, information to the organism.
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