Effects of altered photoperiod or maternal melatonin administration on plasma prolactin concentrations in fetal lambs

Abstract
During winter (December to March), when late-pregnant ewes were maintained under an artificial long-day photoperiod (16 h light) for 3 weeks or more before insertion of fetal vascular cannulae between 118 and 120 days of gestation (full term, 147 days), plasma prolactin concentrations in their fetal lambs were significantly increased throughout the last 3 weeks of gestation in comparison with values in similar aged fetuses from ewes experiencing only the natural short-day (16 h light), plasma prolactin in fetal lambs was significantly reduced within 48 h when ewes were given melatonin by i.v. infusion for 14 h each night to simulate the winter duration of the nocturnal increase in plasma melatonin. Maternal plasma prolactin concentrations also decreased significantly when melatonin was given for 3 weeks, but not in a shorter experiment. Increases in fetal plasma prolactin were proportional to the basal prolactin concentration in fetuses injected i.v. with TRH or a dopaminergic antagonist, metoclopramide, to assess how photoperiod influenced the responsiveness of prolactin secretion to acute stimulation. The results confirm that photoperiod, rather than developmental maturity, is the principal determinant of plasma prolactin in the fetal lamb during the last third of gestation, and provide evidence that photoperiodic information is transmitted to the fetus through the diurnal rhythm of melatonin in the ewe. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 122, 633–643