首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 156 毫秒
1.
When rodents have free access to a running wheel in their home cage, voluntary use of this wheel will depend on the time of day1-5. Nocturnal rodents, including rats, hamsters, and mice, are active during the night and relatively inactive during the day. Many other behavioral and physiological measures also exhibit daily rhythms, but in rodents, running-wheel activity serves as a particularly reliable and convenient measure of the output of the master circadian clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus. In general, through a process called entrainment, the daily pattern of running-wheel activity will naturally align with the environmental light-dark cycle (LD cycle; e.g. 12 hr-light:12 hr-dark). However circadian rhythms are endogenously generated patterns in behavior that exhibit a ~24 hr period, and persist in constant darkness. Thus, in the absence of an LD cycle, the recording and analysis of running-wheel activity can be used to determine the subjective time-of-day. Because these rhythms are directed by the circadian clock the subjective time-of-day is referred to as the circadian time (CT). In contrast, when an LD cycle is present, the time-of-day that is determined by the environmental LD cycle is called the zeitgeber time (ZT).Although circadian rhythms in running-wheel activity are typically linked to the SCN clock6-8, circadian oscillators in many other regions of the brain and body9-14 could also be involved in the regulation of daily activity rhythms. For instance, daily rhythms in food-anticipatory activity do not require the SCN15,16 and instead, are correlated with changes in the activity of extra-SCN oscillators17-20. Thus, running-wheel activity recordings can provide important behavioral information not only about the output of the master SCN clock, but also on the activity of extra-SCN oscillators. Below we describe the equipment and methods used to record, analyze and display circadian locomotor activity rhythms in laboratory rodents.  相似文献   

2.
Circadian rhythms in mammals are regulated by a system of endogenous circadian oscillators (clock cells) in the brain and in most peripheral organs and tissues. One group of clock cells in the hypothalamic SCN (suprachiasmatic nuclei) functions as a pacemaker for co-ordinating the timing of oscillators elsewhere in the brain and body. This master clock can be reset and entrained by daily LD (light-dark) cycles and thereby also serves to interface internal with external time, ensuring an appropriate alignment of behavioural and physiological rhythms with the solar day. Two features of the mammalian circadian system provide flexibility in circadian programming to exploit temporal regularities of social stimuli or food availability. One feature is the sensitivity of the SCN pacemaker to behavioural arousal stimulated during the usual sleep period, which can reset its phase and modulate its response to LD stimuli. Neural pathways from the brainstem and thalamus mediate these effects by releasing neurochemicals that inhibit retinal inputs to the SCN clock or that alter clock-gene expression in SCN clock cells. A second feature is the sensitivity of circadian oscillators outside of the SCN to stimuli associated with food intake, which enables animals to uncouple rhythms of behaviour and physiology from LD cycles and align these with predictable daily mealtimes. The location of oscillators necessary for food-entrained behavioural rhythms is not yet certain. Persistence of these rhythms in mice with clock-gene mutations that disable the SCN pacemaker suggests diversity in the molecular basis of light- and food-entrainable clocks.  相似文献   

3.
4.
5.
Recent progress at the molecular level has revealed that nuclear receptors play an important role in the generation of mammalian circadian rhythms. To examine whether peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) is involved in the regulation of circadian behavioral rhythms in mammals, we evaluated the locomotor activity of mice administered with the hypolipidemic PPARalpha ligand, bezafibrate. Circadian locomotor activity was phase-advanced about 3h in mice given bezafibrate under light-dark (LD) conditions. Transfer from LD to constant darkness did not change the onset of activity in these mice, suggesting that bezafibrate advanced the phase of the endogenous clock. Surprisingly, bezafibrate also advanced the phase in mice with lesions of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN; the central clock in mammals). The circadian expression of clock genes such as period2, BMAL1, and Rev-erbalpha was also phase-advanced in various tissues (cortex, liver, and fat) without affecting the SCN. Bezafibrate also phase-advanced the activity phase that is delayed in model mice with delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) due to a Clock gene mutation. Our results indicated that PPARalpha is involved in circadian clock control independently of the SCN and that PPARalpha could be a potent target of drugs to treat circadian rhythm sleep disorders including DSPS.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
In mammals, it is well established that circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior, including the rhythmic secretion of hormones, are regulated by a brain clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus. While SCN regulation of gonadal hormone secretion has been amply studied, the mechanisms whereby steroid hormones affect circadian functions are less well known. This is surprising considering substantial evidence that sex hormones affect many aspects of circadian responses, and that there are significant sex differences in rhythmicity. Our previous finding that "core" and "shell" regions of the SCN differ in their expression of clock genes prompted us to examine the possibility that steroid receptors are localized to a specific compartment of the brain clock, with the discovery that the androgen receptor (AR) is concentrated in the SCN core in male mice. In the present study, we compare AR expression in female and male mice using Western blots and immunochemistry. Both of these methods indicate that ARs are more highly expressed in males than in females; gonadectomy eliminates and androgen treatment restores these sex differences. At the behavioral level, gonadectomy produces a dramatic loss of the evening activity onset bout in males, but has no such effect in females. Treatment with testosterone, or with the non-aromatizable androgen dihydrotestosterone, restores male locomotor activity and eliminates sex differences in the behavioral response. The results indicate that androgenic hormones regulate circadian responses, and suggest an SCN site of action.  相似文献   

9.
Circadian rhythms in clock gene expressions in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of CS mice and C57BL/6J mice were measured under a daily restricted feeding (RF) schedule in continuous darkness (DD), and entrainment of the SCN circadian pacemaker to RF was examined. After 2-3 wk under a light-dark cycle with free access to food, animals were released into DD and fed for 3 h at a fixed time of day for 3-4 wk. Subsequently, they returned to having free access to food for 2-3 wk. In CS mice, wheel-running rhythms entrained to RF with a stable phase relationship between the activity onset and feeding time, and the rhythms started to free run from the feeding time after the termination of RF. mPer1, mPer2, and mBMAL1 mRNA rhythms in the SCN showed a fixed phase relationship with feeding time, indicating that the circadian pacemaker in the SCN entrained to RF. On the other hand, in C57BL/6J mice, wheel-running rhythms free ran under RF, and clock gene expression rhythms in the SCN showed a stable phase relation not to feeding time but to the behavioral rhythms, indicating that the circadian pacemaker in the SCN did not entrain. These results indicate that the SCN circadian pacemaker of CS mice is entrainable to RF under DD and suggest that CS mice have a circadian clock system that can be reset by a signal associated with feeding time.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In mammals, a light-entrainable clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) regulates circadian rhythms by synchronizing oscillators throughout the brain and body. Notably, the nature of the relation between the SCN clock and subordinate oscillators in the rest of the brain is not well defined. We performed a high temporal resolution analysis of the expression of the circadian clock protein PERIOD2 (PER2) in the rat forebrain to characterize the distribution, amplitude and phase of PER2 rhythms across different regions. Eighty-four LEW/Crl male rats were entrained to a 12-h: 12-h light/dark cycle, and subsequently perfused every 30 min across the 24-h day for a total of 48 time-points. PER2 expression was assessed with immunohistochemistry and analyzed using automated cell counts. We report the presence of PER2 expression in 20 forebrain areas important for a wide range of motivated and appetitive behaviors including the SCN, bed nucleus, and several regions of the amygdala, hippocampus, striatum, and cortex. Eighteen areas displayed significant PER2 rhythms, which peaked at different times of day. Our data demonstrate a previously uncharacterized regional distribution of rhythms of a clock protein expression in the brain that provides a sound basis for future studies of circadian clock function in animal models of disease.  相似文献   

12.
Behavioral and Serotonergic Regulation of Circadian Rhythms   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Endogenous depression is often accompanied by alterations in core parameters of circadian rhythms, and antidepressant treatments, including serotonergic drugs, sleep deprivation and exercise, alter circadian phase or period in humans or animal models. Antidepressants may act in part through the circadian system, and behavioral antidepressants through a common serotonergic path to the clock. This review evaluates the evidence from animal models that serotonin (5-HT) mediates phase-shifting effects of behavioral stimuli on circadian rhythms. In rodents, 'exercise' stimulated during the rest phase of the rest-activity cycle induces large phase shifts of circadian rhythms. These shifts can be mimicked by short-term sleep deprivation without intense activity. During wheel running or sleep deprivation, 5-HT release in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) circadian clock is significantly elevated. Lesions of 5-HT afferents to the SCN attenuate phase shifts or entrainment induced by activity in response to some stimuli (e.g., triazolam injections in hamsters, treadmill running in mice) but not others (e.g., novel wheel confinement in hamsters). Antagonists selective to 5HT1, 2 or 7 receptors do not attenuate shifts induced by wheel running, although 5-HT2/7 antagonists do partially block shifts to saline injections. 5-HT agonists (e.g., 8-OH-DPAT) induce large shifts in vitro, but much smaller shifts in vivo, particularly if administered directly to the SCN. Procedures for inducing 5-HT supersensitivity in vivo result in larger shifts to 8-OH-DPAT. 5-HT stimuli may affect the clock by direct and indirect pathways, particularly through the thalamic intergeniculate leaflet, and the role of these pathways may differ across species. At the level of the SCN, 5-HT likely acts through 5-HT7 receptors on neurons and possibly also glial cells. These receptors may be useful targets for the development of antidepressant drugs. In aggregate, the literature provides mixed support for the hypothesis that exercise or behavioral arousal shift the circadian clock by a 5-HT pathway; the role of indirect pathways, interactions with other transmitters, cellular adaptations to denervation, glial cells, and species differences remain to be more fully clarified. Serotonergic and behavioral stimuli provide an intriguing route to elucidate the circadian clockworks and their possible role in depression.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Every day, we experience profound changes in our mental and physical condition as body and brain alternate between states of high activity during the waking day and rest during night-time sleep. The fundamental evolutionary adaptation to these profound daily changes in our physiological state is an endogenous 24-h clock. This biological clock enables us to prepare ourselves to these daily changes, instead of only being able to show a passive and delayed response. During the past decade, enormous progress has been made in determining possible molecular components of the biological clock. An important question remains, however, regarding how the rhythmic signal from the biological clock is spread throughout the body to control its physiology and behavior. Indeed, ultimately, the only raison d'etre for the biological clock is its output (Green 1998). In the present review, we propose that the main mechanism for the spreading time-of-day information throughout the body consists of different circadian waves of suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) transmitter release, directed to a restricted number of specific SCN target areas, and affecting both neuroendocrine mechanisms and the peripheral autonomic nervous system.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
18.
Endogenous depression is often accompanied by alterations in core parameters of circadian rhythms, and antidepressant treatments, including serotonergic drugs, sleep deprivation and exercise, alter circadian phase or period in humans or animal models. Antidepressants may act in part through the circadian system, and behavioral antidepressants through a common serotonergic path to the clock. This review evaluates the evidence from animal models that serotonin (5-HT) mediates phase-shifting effects of behavioral stimuli on circadian rhythms. In rodents, 'exercise' stimulated during the rest phase of the rest-activity cycle induces large phase shifts of circadian rhythms. These shifts can be mimicked by short-term sleep deprivation without intense activity. During wheel running or sleep deprivation, 5-HT release in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) circadian clock is significantly elevated. Lesions of 5-HT afferents to the SCN attenuate phase shifts or entrainment induced by activity in response to some stimuli (e.g., triazolam injections in hamsters, treadmill running in mice) but not others (e.g., novel wheel confinement in hamsters). Antagonists selective to 5HT1, 2 or 7 receptors do not attenuate shifts induced by wheel running, although 5-HT2/7 antagonists do partially block shifts to saline injections. 5-HT agonists (e.g., 8-OH-DPAT) induce large shifts in vitro, but much smaller shifts in vivo, particularly if administered directly to the SCN. Procedures for inducing 5-HT supersensitivity in vivo result in larger shifts to 8-OH-DPAT. 5-HT stimuli may affect the clock by direct and indirect pathways, particularly through the thalamic intergeniculate leaflet, and the role of these pathways may differ across species. At the level of the SCN, 5-HT likely acts through 5-HT7 receptors on neurons and possibly also glial cells. These receptors may be useful targets for the development of antidepressant drugs. In aggregate, the literature provides mixed support for the hypothesis that exercise or behavioral arousal shift the circadian clock by a 5-HT pathway; the role of indirect pathways, interactions with other transmitters, cellular adaptations to denervation, glial cells, and species differences remain to be more fully clarified. Serotonergic and behavioral stimuli provide an intriguing route to elucidate the circadian clockworks and their possible role in depression.  相似文献   

19.
The behavior of mammals is characterized by a 24-h cycle of rest and activity which is a fundamental adaption to the solar cycle of light and darkness. The pacemaker of this circadian clock is localized in the ventral part of the hypothalamus, the so-called suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), and is entrained by light signals mediated by the eye. The eye is directly connected via the retinohypothalamic tract (RHT) to the SCN. Light that reaches the retina elicits glutamate release at the synaptic terminals of the RHT and influences the neurons in the SCN in a manner that alters the behavioral state of the animal. A light pulse that reaches the retina at the beginning of the night elicits a delay of the clock phase, whereas a light pulse that reaches the retina at the end of the dark period leads to an advance of the clock phase. This advance or delay can be quantified by measuring the change in onset of wheel-running activity. Such measurements have, and continue to provide, a remarkably powerful assay of how light is detected and transduced to regulate circadian rhythms. The methods used for such measurements in mice are described in the following article.  相似文献   

20.
Orchestration of gene expression and physiology by the circadian clock   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Urs Albrecht   《Journal of Physiology》2006,100(5-6):243-251
  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号