J. Serviere et al., HOST RESETS PHASE OF GRAFTED SCN - INFLUENCE OF IMPLANT SITE, TISSUE-SPECIFICITY AND PINEAL SECRETION, Neuroscience letters, 176(1), 1994, pp. 80-84
The suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) have daily fluctuations in energy con
sumption with glucose utilization high in the day, and low at night. I
n a previous study, we used [C-14]2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) uptake to inde
x the phase of the SCN, and found that in intact hamsters bearing SCN
grafts in the third ventricle (3V), the native and grafted SCN, which
were initially 12 h out of phase, became synchronized to the phase of
the host clock [32]. In the present study, adult males (host animals)
and pregnant females (source of donor tissue) were housed in opposite
light-dark cycles. Host animals were sacrificed 14 days after implanta
tion with either (1) SCN grafts into the lateral ventricle (LV), or (2
) cortical grafts into 3V, or (3) SCN grafts in 3V of pinealectomized
hamster. The results indicate that rhythms of 2-DG uptake are not indu
ced in cortical tissue grafts, that the host SCN does not entrain SCN
grafts located in the LV, and that entrainment of the grafted SCN (loc
ated in 3V) by the host circadian system occurs in the absence of pine
al secretions.