| Literature DB >> 32300290 |
Susannah C Lumsden1,2, Andrew N Clarkson1,3,4, Yusuf Ozgur Cakmak1,2,4,5.
Abstract
Stimulation of the pineal gland via its sympathetic innervation pathway results in the production of N-acetylserotonin and melatonin. Melatonin has many therapeutic roles and is heavily implicated in the regulation of the sleep-wake cycle. In addition, N-acetylserotonin has recently been reported to promote neurogenesis in the brain. Upregulation of these indoleamines is possible via neuromodulation of the pineal gland. This is achieved by electrical stimulation of structures or fibres in the pineal gland sympathetic innervation pathway. Many studies have performed such pineal neuromodulation using both invasive and non-invasive methods. However, the effects of various experimental variables and stimulation paradigms has not yet been reviewed and evaluated. This review summarises these studies and presents the optimal experimental protocols and stimulation parameters necessary for maximal upregulation of melatonin metabolic output.Entities:
Keywords: AANAT; NAS; SCG; melatonin; neuromodulation; pineal; stimulation; sympathetic
Year: 2020 PMID: 32300290 PMCID: PMC7145358 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Biosynthesis of melatonin. Tryptophan is converted to 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) by the enzyme tryptophan-5-hydroxylase (TPH). 5-HTP is then converted to serotonin via the enzyme 5-HTP decarboxylase. Serotonin is subsequently converted to NAS and then melatonin via the enzymes AANAT and HIOMT, respectively.
FIGURE 2Innervation of the pineal gland. The RHT which projects to the SCN followed by the PVN. The pineal pathway then descends down the spinal cord to the IML. Preganglionic sympathetic fibres ascend, pass through the inferior and middle cervical ganglia before terminating on the SCG. Postganglionic sympathetic fibres then ascend and innervate the pineal gland. (A-left) During the day, this pathway is inhibited due to light. (B-right) During the night, an absence of light activates this pathway and the pineal gland receives sympathetic input.
FIGURE 3Intra- and intercellular modulation of melatonin synthesis. NE binds to the ɑ1, ɑ2, and β1 adrenergic receptors on pinealocytes triggering a complex myriad of intracellular molecular cascades that eventually regulate melatonin synthesis. Pinealocytes may engage in autocrine and/or paracrine regulation via glutamate release via mGluR3. Pinealocytes may also form a tripartite synapse with astrocytes and postganglionic sympathetic terminals. Blue arrows, upregulating melatonin synthesis; red arrows, downregulating melatonin synthesis; black arrows, mixed or unclear effects on melatonin synthesis. 5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HTP, 5-hydroxytryptophan; AA, arachidonic acid; AANAT, aralkylamine N-acetyltransferase; AC, adenylate cyclase; AMPA, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; ɑ1-AR, ɑ1-adrenoreceptor; ɑ2-AR, ɑ2-adrenoreceptor; BKCa2+, large-conductance Ca2+–activated K+channel; CACC, Ca2+activated Cl– channels; CaM, calcium binding protein calmodulin; cAMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; CBP, CREB-binding protein; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; CRE, cAMP response element; CREB, cAMP response element binding protein; DAG, diacylglycerol; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; GC, guanylate cyclase; Glut, glutamate; iGluR1, ionotropic glutamate receptor 1; IP3, inositol trisphosphate; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase MAPK; Mel, melatonin; mGluR3, metabotropic glutamate receptor 3; mGluR5, metabotropic glutamate receptor 5; nAChR, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor; NAS, N-acetylserotonin; NE, norepinephrine; NF-kβ, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated β cells; NO, nitric oxide; NOS, nitric oxide synthetase; PDE, phosphodiesterase; PKA, protein kinase A; PKC, protein kinase C; PKG, protein kinase G; PLA2, phospholipase A2; SKCa2+, small-conductance Ca2+–activated K+ channel; TNF- α, tumour necrosis factor – α; VDCC, voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels; β1-AR, β1-adrenoreceptor.
FIGURE 4(A-bottom left) Nervi conarii. The nervi conarii form an intermingling plexus of fibres over the pineal gland and release norepinephrine onto pinealocytes during the night to stimulate melatonin synthesis. (B-top right) Pinealocyte clusters. Spontaneously firing pinealocytes (Sp) are arranged into “clusters” of regularly firing cells (REG) and rhythmically firing cells (RHY). Clusters are surrounded by “silent” cells (Si) which exhibit no spontaneous firing. The firing of RHY cluster is synaptically linked to the firing of another (red arrows). The electrical response of pinealocytes is complex. Inhibitory and excitatory responses have been recorded from pinealocytes (+ and –). Specific groups of pinealocyte may become excited or inhibited depending upon the source of innervation i.e., left, right or both SCG. Regulation of pineal electrical responses might be also mediated by pinealocytes themselves, with the excitation of one pinealocyte causing the inhibition of another (green arrow).
Summary of response rates from evoked potential studies.
| Rat | Habenular nuclei | Bilateral | 42 | 57.2% ( | 42.8% ( | 44.4% ( | 55.6% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 19% ( | 23.8% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 7 silent units were found. Confluens sinuum impaled with electrode. | |
| Rat | SCG | Unilateral | 94 | 55.3% ( | 44.7% ( | 57.1% ( | 42.9% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 25.6% ( | 19.1% ( | Not described | N/A | N/A | 13 silent units were found. Confluens sinuum impaled with electrode. | |
| Bilateral | 52 | 26.9% ( | 73.1% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 76.3% ( | 23.7% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 55.8% ( | 17.3% ( | Confluens sinuum impaled with electrode. | |||
| Rat | SCG | Bilateral | 76 | 44.7% ( | 55.3% ( | Not described | 55.3% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described | 55.3% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 6 silent units were found. Sagittal sinus ligated. | |
| Rat | SCG | Unilateral | 19 | 53% ( | 47% ( | 56% ( | 33% ( | 11% ( | N/A | N/A | 26.3% ( | 26.3% ( | 5.3% ( | N/A | N/A | In some animals, the sagittal sinus was ligated | |
| SCN | Unilateral | 19 | 47% ( | 53% ( | 50% ( | 30% ( | 20% ( | N/A | N/A | 26.3% ( | 15.8% ( | 10.5% ( | N/A | N/A | |||
| Hamster | SCG | Unilateral | 48 | 72% ( | 28% ( | 61.5% ( | 46.2% ( | Not described | N/A | N/A | 16% ( | 12% ( | Not described | N/A | N/A | Sagittal sinus ligated and cut. See notes** | |
| Hamster | SCG | Both | 92 | 38% ( | 62% ( | 36.8% ( | 36.8% ( | 15.8% ( | Not described | Not described | 22.8% ( | 29.3% ( | 9.8% ( | Not described | Not described | No differences in form or magnitude of response found between unilateral vs bilateral or right vs left SCG stimulation. Confluens sinuum impaled with electrode. | |
| Guinea-pig | Lateral habenular nuclei | Bilateral | 128 | 56% ( | 44% ( | 44% ( | 20% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | 35% ( | 9% ( | Not described | Not described | Not described | No mention is made of the confluens sinuum in the methodology. | |
Summary of experimental procedures and stimulation parameters for reviewed studies concerning both invasive and non-invasive stimulation.
| Rat | White | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Cervical sympathetic trunks | Not described | 48 s | 1 every 1.25 s | 30 Hz | Not described | Not described | Urethane | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive Electrical | Not described | Medial habenular nucleus | Usually > 18:00 | Not described | 50– 200 μs | Up to 10 Hz | 0.001− 0.1 mA | Darkened room | Urethane | Following stimulation | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Wistar | Invasive electrical | Habenular complex: bilaterally, sciatic nerve: unilaterally, septal area: unclear, optic tract: unclear | Sciatic nerve, habenular complex and adjacent stria medullary, septal area, optic tract | 10:00– 18:00 | Not described | 0.5 ms | Not described | Variable intensity | Relatively dark room with no direct light on the animals | Ether | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Guinea-pig | N/A | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Lateral habenular nuclei | Daytime | 50−100 ms (train) | 0.5 ms | 100 Hz | 0.5 mA | Darkened room | Urethane, pentobarbitone. glucose, gallamine triethiodide mixture | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive Electrical | Bilateral | Cervical sympathetic trunks | Night-time | Not described | 0.5, 1.0, 3.0, 5.0, and 20 ms | 10 Hz | ∼5 – 60 μA | Not described | Chloral Hydrate | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Not described | Invasive Electrical | Bilateral | Lateral habenular nuclei | Daytime | Not described | 0.1– 0.5 ms | 1–10 Hz | 0.1–0.5 mA (occasionally up to 5 mA) | Darkened room | Urethane and pentobarbital | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Both | SCG | 09:00–18:00 | Not described | 0.2 ms | 10 Hz | 0.1–0.5 mA | “Natural lighting conditions” | Urethane | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Postganglionic nerve fibres of the SCG | Not described | Not described | 0.2 ms | 1 Hz | 0.1– 0.6 mA | Ordinary room illumination during light cycle | Urethane | Following stimulation | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Hamster | Golden | Invasive electrical | SCG: unilateral, habenular nuclei: bilateral | SCG and lateral habenular nuclei | During the dark and light periods | <17 h | 0.2ms | 2–20 Hz | 0.2 mA for habenular and optic but up to 2mA for the SCG | Not described | Urethane | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Hamster | Golden | Invasive electrical | Both | SCG | up to 6 h after 15:30 | Not described | 0.5–1 ms | 10–20 Hz | 0.5–1 mA | Artificial lab lighting | Urethane | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Wistar | Invasive electrical | Unilateral | SCG and sciatic nerve | 09:00–18:00 | Not described | 0.5 ms | Not described | Up to 0.5 mA | “Relatively dark room with no direct light on the animal during daylight” | Urethane | Not described | Not described | N/A | N/A | |
| Rat | Holtzman | Invasive electrical | Unilateral | Preganglionic cervical sympathetic fibres | Not described | 4 h | 9 s on; 51 s off | 10 Hz | 3–5 mA | Not described but animals blinded | Ether | 4-h post-op | Not described but animals blinded | HIOMT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Holtzman | Invasive electrical | Unilateral | Preganglionic cervical sympathetic trunk | Daytime/light phase | 1, 2, or 3 h | 10 ms for 9 s every min | 10 Hz | 2x that required to produce maximal exophthalmos in the eye (2 × 0.23 mA) | Not described | Ether | Immediately or 1-h post-stimulation cessation | Not described | AANAT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Cervical sympathetic trunks | >4 h after darkness onset | Animals were not stimulated past the time were lights would normally turn on | 0.5 ms | 5 Hz | 0.4–2.0 mA | Exposed to light for 15 min prior to anaesthetic administration for SCG exposure to reduce night-time AANAT levels by more than 95% | Chloral hydrate | Immediately post-stimulation – before the onset of the light period | Dim red light | AANAT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat ( | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | SCG | Not described | 1 min | 10 ms | 10 Hz (10 V) | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described | cAMP | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Both | Cervical sympathetic trunks | Night (>4 h into night period) AND day (>4 h into light period) | 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 2 h | 0.5 ms | 10 Hz | 2x that require to produce maximal exophthalmos of the ipsilateral eye (values ranged for each nerve from 100–1000uA) | Not described | Chloral hydrate | Immediately following stimulation | Not described | AANAT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Cervical sympathetic trunks | >4 h into light period | 3 h | Not described | 5 Hz | 2x that required to produce maximal exophthalmos in the ipsilateral eye | >4 h into light period | Chloral hydrate | >7 h into light period | Dimred light | AANAT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rats | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | PVN | Daytime experiments: 11:00–13:00; Night-time experiments: 00:00–06:00 | 15, 30, 60 min | 0.2 ms | 10 Hz | 0.1 mA | Normal artificial light | Urethane | Following stimulation | Normal artificial light but animals blinded for night-time experiments | AANAT, melatonin | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | PVN | >02:00 | 2 min | 0.2 ms | 10 Hz | 0.1 mA | Yes, but all animals blinded surgically | Urethane | 30 min post-stimulation | Artificial light but animals are blinded | Melatonin, NE | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | SCG | 10:00–14:00 | (1) 120 min; (2a + b) 15 min | (1) 0.5 ms; (2a) 0.5 ms; (2b) 1 ms | (1) 10 Hz; (2a) 10 Hz; (2b) 25 Hz | (1) 0.5 mA; (2a + b) 0.5 mA | Not described | Urethane | (1) 2 h after stimulation onset; (2) immediately following stimulation | Not described | AANAT | Pineal homogenization of 2/3 of each gland | |
| Rabbit | New Zealand | Invasive electrical | Unilateral | Left preganglionic cervical sympathetic trunk | Light phase | 24– 60 min | 60 ms every 2 s OR 7.5 s every 20 s | 300 Hz | 1–5 mA | Not described | Pentobarbital | Not described | Not described | Melatonin | Blood (plasma) sampling from the confluens sinuum | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Invasive electrical | Bilateral | Cervical sympathetic trunks | 4–8 h into daytime | 3 h | 0.5 ms | 10, 5, 2.5, and 1 Hz (10 Hz was considered optimal for AANAT stimulation) | 0.2–0.8 mA | Not described | Chloral hydrate | Immediately after stimulation (stimulation carried out 4–8 h into daytime) | Not described | AANAT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Non-invasive electrical | Bilateral | Ears | Before 12:00 | One shock every day for 7 days | 0.75 s | 130 V | Not described | Not described | Not described | 2100h | Dim red light | 5-HT, melatonin, NAS | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Wistar | Non-invasive electrical | Bilateral | Ears | At the end of the light phase with the very final treatment being given at 22:00 | A single electric sock or 10 shocks per day over 10 consecutive days | 500 ms | 50 Hz | 70 mA (to induce tonic-clonic seizures) | Not described | Not described | 1 or 2 h after the final stimulation | Light or dim-red light | AANAT, HIOMT | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Sprague Dawley | Non-invasive electrical | Bilateral | Ears | 10:00 | Not described | 0.75 s | 130 V | Not described | Not described | Not described | 90 min after stimulation | Not described | Melatonin, serotonin, 5-HIAA. NAS | Pineal homogenization | |
| Rat | Wistar | Percutaneous electrical nerve stimulation | N/A | Fengfu DU16 and Jinsuo DU8 | Not described | 30 or 60 min | Not described | 80 Hz | 1.7–2.5 mA | Not described | Sodium pentobarbital | After stimulation | Not described | Melatonin | Pineal homogenization | |
| Humans | Humans with anxiety and insomnia (but no diagnosed anxiety disorder) | Acupuncture | Not described | Not described | Not described | 2× a week for 5 weeks | 1 hr per session | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Melatonin | Measurement of urinary melatonin metabolite aMT6s | |
| Humans | Humans with insomnia and anxiety | Acupuncture | Not described | Not described | Not described | 2× a week for 5 weeks | N/A | N/A | N/A | Not described | N/A | N/A | N/A | Melatonin | Measurement of urinary melatonin metabolite aMT6s | |
| Rat | Zucker diabetic fatty and Zucker lean | Non-invasive electrical | Bilateral | Right side auricular concha region | 14:00–17:00 | 30 min for 34 consecutive days | Not described | 2 and 15 Hz alternating every sec | 2 mA | Not described | Isoflurane | Not described | Not described | Melatonin | Blood (plasma) sampling from the tail vein | |
| Rat | Zucker diabetic fatty | Non-invasive electrical | Bilateral | Right side auricular concha region | Afternoon | 30 min | Not described | 2 and 15 Hz switched every sec | 2 mA | Not described | Isoflurane | Not described | Not described | Melatonin | Blood (plasma) sampling from the tail vein | |