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Effect of a light pulse during the dark on photoperiodic regulation of the rate of thyroxine-induced, spontaneous, and prolactin-inhibited metamorphosis inRana pipiens tadpoles

✍ Scribed by Wright, Mary L. ;Jorey, Suzanne T. ;Blanchard, Linda S. ;Basso, Carolyn A.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
909 KB
Volume
247
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-104X

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✦ Synopsis


Since Rana pipiens tadpoles injected with thyroxine (T4) early in the dark develop more slowly than those injected in the light, we studied the effect of giving a light pulse of 1 hr early in the dark. Tadpoles injected under a 7.5-W red light bulb in a darkened room with 0.2 microgram T4 daily at 2200 hr went through metamorphosis faster on a 12L:3D:1L:8D cycle with a light pulse after injection than on a 12L:12D cycle without a light pulse, and even faster on a 12L:1.5D:1L:9.5D cycle with a light pulse before the injection. Thus a 1-hr light pulse counteracted the metamorphic delay resulting from administration of T4 in the dark, and set in motion the conditions that resulted in a more rapid response to an injection of T4. However, a 1-hr light pulse in the early dark had no effect on growth and development of older or younger untreated tadpoles or those constantly immersed in 30 micrograms/liter T4. Larvae on 21L:3D with T4 injection in the dark and on 12L:3D:1L:8D with T4 injection at 0700 hr just before the start of the main light phase progressed faster than 12L:3D:1L:8D with injection at 2200 hr in the dark before only a 1-hr light pulse. Thus the length of the light phase immediately after T4 injection was significant. There was no difference on 12L:12D and 12L:3D:1L:8D cycles in the effectiveness of daily injections of 10 micrograms prolactin (PRL) in the early dark at 2200 hr in promoting tail growth or antagonizing tail resorption induced by T4 immersion. Under these conditions, PRL utilization did not appear to be inhibited by the light pulse.