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Title: Influence of the seasons on the circadian rhythm of blood glucose and tissue glycogen in male Wistar rats. Author: Ahlersová E, Ahlers I, Garlátiová E, Toropila M, Smajda B. Journal: Physiol Bohemoslov; 1982; 31(1):45-55. PubMed ID: 6461871. Abstract: Adult, ad libitum fed male Wistar rats were adapted for three weeks to standard laboratory conditions and a 12:12 h light:dark regimen (7 a.m. to 7 p.m., 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.). In January, in April, in July and in October they were decapitated at 3-hour intervals and the glucose level was determined in their blood and the glycogen concentration in their liver, skeletal muscle, heart and white and brown adipose tissue. The influence of the seasons on circadian variation of the given parameters was not the same in all the tissues. Circadian variation of the liver and heart glycogen concentration was the least affected. The liver glycogen curves attained the maximum at the beginning of the light part of the day in all the seasons except the autumn; the rhythm was present everywhere. The rhythm was not demonstrated in the heart in the winter only and except for the summer the curves attained the maximum at the end of the dark part of the day. Pronounced seasonal changes were observed in the blood glucose and skeletal muscle glycogen concentration, whose curves reached the maximum in various parts of the day and where the rhythm was absent in the autumn - and in the case of skeletal muscle in the summer as well. The glycogen concentration in the two adipose tissues displayed the greatest seasonal changes. The shape of the circadian oscillation curves and their maxima in the various seasons were very different, with absence of the rhythm in the autumn. Determination of the influence of the photoperiodic reactions and of changes in hormones and the key enzymes regulating the main metabolic routes might help to explain the basis of circaannual variations in the metabolism of the laboratory rat.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]