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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 293: R2363-R2369, 2007. First published September 26, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00520.2007
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ENVIRONMENTAL, EXERCISE AND RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY

Photoperiodic and hormonal influences on fur density and regrowth in two hamster species

Matthew J. Paul,1 Nicole T. George,2 Irving Zucker,1,2 and Matthew P. Butler2

Departments of 1Psychology and 2Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California

Submitted 18 July 2007 ; accepted in final form 20 September 2007

Temperate and boreal mammals undergo seasonal changes in pelage that facilitate thermoregulation in winter and summer. We investigated photoperiodic influences on pelage characteristics of male Siberian and Syrian hamsters. Fur density (mg fur/cm2 skin) was measured by weighing the shavings of fur patches removed from the dorsal and ventral surfaces of hamsters maintained in long days (LDs) or transferred to short days (SDs). Patches were reshaved 3 wk later to assess fur regrowth (mg regrown fur/cm2 skin). Fur density was greater in SD than in LD Siberian hamsters after 11 wk of differential phototreatment. The onset of increased fur density in SDs was accompanied by a transient increase in fur regrowth (11–14 wk on the dorsal surface and 7–10 and 11–14 wk on the ventral surface), suggestive of a seasonal molting process. Fur density, body mass, and pelage color of Siberian hamsters returned to values characteristic of LD males after a similar duration of prolonged (>27 wk) SD treatment and appear to be regulated by a similar or common interval-timing mechanism. In Syrian hamsters, dorsal fur density, fur regrowth, and hair lengths were greater in SD than in LD males. Castration increased and testosterone (T) treatment decreased dorsal and ventral fur regrowth in LD and SD hamsters, but the effects of T manipulations on fur density were limited to a decrease in dorsal fur density after T treatment. Decreased circulating T in SDs likely contributes to the seasonal molt of male hamsters by increasing the rate of fur growth during the transition to the winter pelage.

Siberian hamster; Syrian hamster; photoperiodism; testosterone



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. J. Paul, Dept. of Neurology, Univ. of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA 01655 (e-mail: matthew.paul{at}umassmed.edu)







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