Journal Article10.1111/J.1600-079X.1988.TB00771.X
Xenopus tadpole melanophores are controlled by dark and light and melatonin without influence of time of day.
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TL;DR: Melanophores were studied in tadpoles of the South African clawed toad during the first week after hatching and became punctate in response to a series of melatonin concentrations in their bathing water irrespective of the time of day melatonin was administered.
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Abstract: Melanophores were studied in tadpoles of the South African clawed toad, Xenopus laevis, during the first week after hatching (stages 46-49) at 25 degrees C. The tadpoles had melanophores with dispersed melanosomes in the light and punctate melanophores in the dark in LD 12:12. The melanophores remained punctate in constant dark and the melanosomes remained dispersed in constant light. Lights-out (in the light-time of LD 12:12) caused the melanophores to become punctate, which occurred more quickly than the dispersion of melanosomes, which commenced when the lights were turned on (in the dark-time of LD 12:12). Melanophores with dispersed melanosomes in tadpoles (in constant light) became punctate in response to a series of melatonin concentrations (0.2-5 ng/ml) in their bathing water irrespective of the time of day melatonin was administered. An image-analysis technique for assessing melanophore responses was tested.
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Citations
Light Pollution, Circadian Photoreception, and Melatonin in Vertebrates
Maja Grubisic,Abraham Haim,Pramod Bhusal,Davide M. Dominoni,Katharina M. A. Gabriel,Andreas Jechow,Franziska Kupprat,Amit Lerner,Paul Marchant,W. D. Riley,Katarína Stebelová,Roy H. A. van Grunsven,Michal Zeman,Abed E. Zubidat,Franz Hölker +14 more
TL;DR: An overview of research on melatonin and ALAN in vertebrates is provided, which identifies major research gaps and concludes that, for most groups, crucial information is lacking.
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