5-Methoxytryptophol, a serotonin metabolite, was measured by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry in pineal glands, plasma and control tissues (cerebral cortex and salivary glands) from male rats kept in a controlled lighting environment. In the pineal gland the level of 5-methoxytryptophol was significantly higher during the dark period than during the light, the absolute levels being an order of magnitude less than those of melatonin. In the plasma, the levels showed a reverse situation with respect to lighting conditions. No correlation was found between the 5-methoxytryptophol levels in plasma and the pineal gland in individual animals. These results suggest that there is no obvious correlation between pineal content and pineal activity. This may be due to a combination of rapid turnover, secretion and/or peripheral conversion of another 5-methoxyindole to 5-methoxytryptophol.
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