Itoh S, Hirota R
Nihon Naibunpi Gakkai Zasshi. 1978 Mar 20;54(3):227-37. doi: 10.1507/endocrine1927.54.3_227.
The effect of a single neonatal administration of cortisol and estriol on the development of the adrenocortical circadian rhythm was investigated in immature rats. In normal control rats of both sexes, the plasma corticosterone rhythm was discernible on day 21. In male rats the adult pattern was observed on day 28, but in females as the plasma corticosterone level elevated progressively during puberty, the rhythm increased in amplitude and the adult pattern was established at 8 weeks of age. In neonatally cortisol-treated rats, the plasma corticosterone rhythm appeared at 4 weeks of age, but the plasma level was significantly lower than that of the controls until 6 weeks and attained a level similar to the controls at 8 weeks. Neonatally estriol-treated rats exhibited the rhythm as early as 2 weeks of age, but this was temporary. It disappeared at 3 weeks and reappeared a 4 weeks. Although 5-week-old males showed normal rhythm as seen in the controls, in females the plasma corticosterone level remained low for weeks and approached the control level at 8 weeks of age. The development of circadian periodicity of adrenal corticosterone content almost paralleled that of plasma corticosterone not only in the controls but also in steroid-treated groups, but the rhythm was occasionally equivocal. In neonatally estriol-treated rats, stress response of plasma and adrenal corticosterone to ether was similar to that of the controls, but the response to exposure to a strange environment was significantly small.