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1.
Phase responses to red and blue light pulses were measured at different times during the circadian cycle (phase response curves, PRC) in the marine unicellular dinoflagellate Gonyaulaxpolyedra Stein. Pulses were given during a 24-h period of darkness; thereafter, cultures were released into constant dim red light for the assessment of phase and period. The results confirmed earlier findings that the Gonyaulax circadian system receives light signals via two distinct input pathways. During the subjective day and for the first 3 h of the subjective night, red and blue light pulses led to identical phase responses. For the rest of the circadian cycle, however, phase responses to pulses of either red or blue light differed drastically both in their amplitude and direction (advances or delays). Thus, the Gonyaulax light PRC is generated by two distinct light responses. One of these represents responses via a light input that is responsive both to red and blue light mainly producing small delays. The other represents responses of a primarily blue-sensitive input system leading to large advances restricted to the subjective night. Via feed-back, the blue-sensitive light input appears to be under the control of the circadian system. Received: 27 November 1996/Accepted: 30 January 1997  相似文献   

2.
This review summarizes our current understanding of the signal transduction cascade by which light causes phase shifts of the circadian oscillators found in the eye of Bulla and Aplysia. The isolated retina of these marine mollusks contains a circadian oscillator, a photoreceptor, and a light transduction pathway sufficient for entrainment. This preparation offers unique advantages for the cellular analysis of entrainment and the generation of circadian oscillations. There is evidence that similar cellular mechanisms may underlie mammalian and molluskan circadian oscillations. Thus, the models developed to explain entrainment in the molluskan retina are likely to have utility in exploring the mammalian supra-chiasmatic nucleus.  相似文献   

3.
Most physiological processes in mammals are synchronized to the daily light:dark cycle by a circadian clock located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus. Signal transduction of light‐induced phase advances of the clock is mediated through a neuronal nitric oxide synthase‐guanilyl cyclase pathway. We have employed a novel nitric oxide‐donor, N‐nitrosomelatonin, to enhance the photic synchronization of circadian rhythms in hamsters. The intraperitoneal administration of this drug before a sub‐saturating light pulse at circadian time 18 generated a twofold increase of locomotor rhythm phase‐advances, having no effect over saturating light pulses. This potentiation was also obtained even when inhibiting suprachiasmatic nitric oxide synthase activity. However, N‐nitrosomelatonin had no effect on light‐induced phase delays at circadian time 14. The photic‐enhancing effects were correlated with an increased suprachiasmatic immunoreactivity of FBJ murine osteosarcoma viral oncogene and period1. Moreover, in vivo nitric oxide release by N‐nitrosomelatonin was verified by measuring nitrate and nitrite levels in suprachiasmatic nuclei homogenates. The compound also accelerated resynchronization to an abrupt 6‐h advance in the light:dark cycle (but not resynchronization to a 6‐h delay). Here, we demonstrate the chronobiotic properties of N‐nitrosomelatonin, emphasizing the importance of nitric oxide‐mediated transduction for circadian phase advances.

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4.
Abstract

The circadian chloroplast migration in Acetabularia mediterranea was monitored by continuously measuring the transmission of the cells near the apex. Under continuous red light the amplitude of the rhythm decreased rapidly within a few days. However, circadian changes of chloroplast density were still detectable even after 28 days of red light, indicating the persistence of the rhythm. When blue light was added after red light preirradiation of several days phase shifts were observed which were expressed as advances as well as delays. The period of the rhythm proved to be strongly dependent on the intensity of the continuous blue light which was given in addition to red light. Different red light intensities did not change the period. The occurrence of both effects indicates that the sensory transduction of blue light photoreception in Acetabularia works in two different ways: quanta counting processes and processes of light intensity measurement.  相似文献   

5.
The pineal gland plays a key role in the control of the daily and seasonal rhythms in most vertebrate species. In mammals, rhythmic melatonin (MT) release from the pineal gland is controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus via the sympathetic nervous system. In most non‐mammalian species, including birds, the pineal gland contains a self‐sustained circadian oscillator and several input channels to synchronize the clock, including direct light sensitivity. Avian pineal glands maintain rhythmic activity for days under in vitro conditions. Several physical (light, temperature, and magnetic field) and biochemical (Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), norepinephrine, PACAP, etc.) input channels, influencing release of melatonin are also functional in vitro, rendering the explanted avian pineal an excellent model to study the circadian biological clock. Using a perifusion system, we here report that the phase of the circadian melatonin rhythm of the explanted chicken pineal gland can be entrained easily to photoperiods whose length approximates 24 h, even if the light period is extremely short, i.e., 3L:21D. When the length of the photoperiod significantly differs from 24 h, the endogenous MT rhythm becomes distorted and does not follow the light‐dark cycle. When explanted chicken pineal fragments were exposed to various drugs targeting specific components of intracellular signal transduction cascades, only those affecting the cAMP‐protein kinase‐A system modified the MT release temporarily without phase‐shifting the rhythm in MT release. The potential role of cGMP remains to be investigated.  相似文献   

6.
Plants generate rhythmic metabolism during the repetitive day/night cycle. The circadian clock produces internal biological rhythms to synchronize numerous metabolic processes such that they occur at the required time of day. Metabolism conversely influences clock function by controlling circadian period and phase and the expression of core‐clock genes. Here, we show that AKIN10, a catalytic subunit of the evolutionarily conserved key energy sensor sucrose non‐fermenting 1 (Snf1)‐related kinase 1 (SnRK1) complex, plays an important role in the circadian clock. Elevated AKIN10 expression led to delayed peak expression of the circadian clock evening‐element GIGANTEA (GI) under diurnal conditions. Moreover, it lengthened clock period specifically under light conditions. Genetic analysis showed that the clock regulator TIME FOR COFFEE (TIC) is required for this effect of AKIN10. Taken together, we propose that AKIN10 conditionally works in a circadian clock input pathway to the circadian oscillator.  相似文献   

7.
Stem and leaf tissues of Stellaria longipes Goldie (prairie ecotype) exhibit circadian rhythmicity in the activity and mRNA abundance for 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid oxidase (EC 1.4.3). The steady-state mRNA levels and enzymatic activity levels fluctuated with a period of approximately 24 h and reached their maxima by the middle of the light phase and minima by the middle of the dark phase. The oscillations showed damping under constant light, constant dark and constant temperature conditions, indicating that the rhythm is entrained by an external signal. The results indicate that light/dark cycles have greater entraining effects than temperature cycles. A 15-min red light pulse, but not a blue light pulse, could reset rhythm in continuous darkness, suggesting the possible role of a red-light signal transduction pathway in the circadian regulation of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid oxidase.Abbreviations ACC 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid - DD continuous dark - LD light-dark - LL continuous light - ZT Zeitgeber time (start of light period for circadian entrainment) This study was supported by operating grants to C.C.C., and D.M.R. from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.The authors gratefully acknowledge the award of a Bettina Bahlsen memorial Graduate Scholarship by University of Calgary to A.K. We are grateful to Dr. M.M. Moloney for allowing the use of his laboratory facilities.  相似文献   

8.
The biochemical properties of the ferredoxin/thioredoxin transduction pathway regulating the activity of key carbon-fixation enzymes through post-translational modifications are well characterized but little is known about the regulation of the different genes. In the present study, we investigated in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii the regulation of the expression of ferredoxin, thioredoxin m, ferredoxin-NADP reductase, phosphoribulokinase, as well as that of cytosolic thioredoxin h, the function of which is still largely unknown. The effects of light, the circadian clock and active cell division were investigated by northern blotting. The five genes were found to be regulated by light and the circadian clock but with different kinetics and amplitudes. This leads for the first time to the proposal that an extra-chloroplastic thioredoxin is possibly implicated in light and/or circadian-related processes. An interplay between several light-transduction pathways in controlling the expression of the genes is suggested by the expression studies and the theoretical analysis of the promoters. Received: 2 December 1998 / Accepted: 19 March 1999  相似文献   

9.
The input pathway between the blue-light photoreceptor and the circadian oscillator of Neurospora crassa has not yet been identified. To test the hypothesis that an inositol phospholipid signaling system might be involved in blue-light signal transduction, phase resetting by light was assayed in the inositol-requiring inl strain under conditions of inositol depletion. Phase-resetting curves and dose-response curves indicated that cultures maintained on low inositol (25 microM) were several orders of magnitude more sensitive to light than those maintained on high inositol (250 microM). This difference in light sensitivity was a property of inositol auxotrophy and was not seen in the wild type or in an inositol-independent inl+ revertant. Phase resetting by temperature was not affected by inositol depletion, indicating that the effect on light resetting is specific to the light input pathway and is not the result of a change in the amplitude of the oscillator itself. The results indicate an indirect role for inositol metabolites in the light input pathway--one that is not likely to involve direct participation of an inositol phospholipid signal transduction mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
In mammals, non-visual responses to light involve intrinsically photosensitive melanopsin-expressing retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) that receive synaptic inputs from rod and cone photoreceptors. Several studies have shown that cones also play a role in light entrainment, photic responses of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), pupil constriction, and sleep induction. These studies suggest that cones are mainly involved in the initial response to light, whereas melanopsin provides a sustained input for non-visual responses during continued light exposure. Based on this idea, we explored the effects of the absence of middle-wavelength (MW)-cones on the temporal responses of circadian behavior and clock gene expression in light. In mice lacking MW-cones, our results show a reduction in behavioral phase shifts in response to light stimulations of short duration at 480 and 530?nm, but no alteration for short-wavelength (360-nm) light exposures. Similarly, induction of the period gene mPer1 and mPer2 mRNAs in the SCN are attenuated in response to light exposures of mid to long wavelengths. Modeling of the photoresponses shows that mice lacking MW-cones have an overall reduction in sensitivity that increases with longer wavelengths. The differences in photic responsiveness are consistent with the idea that cones provide a strong initial phasic input to the circadian system at light-onset and may confer a priming effect on ipRGC responses to sub-threshold light exposures. In summary, the contribution of MW-cones is essential for the normal expression of phase shifts and clock gene induction by light in mammals. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

11.
Summary Pulses of darkness can phase-shift the circadian activity rhythms of hamsters,Mesocricetus auratus, kept in constant light. Dark pulses under these conditions alter photic input to the circadian system, but they also commonly trigger wheel-running activity. This paper investigates the contribution of running activity to the phase-shifting effects of dark pulses. A first experiment showed that running activity by itself can phaseshift rhythms in constant light. Hamsters were induced to run by being confined to a novel wheel for 3–5 h. When this was done at circadian times (CT) 0, 6, and 9, the mean steady-state phase-shifts were 0.6 h, 3.5 h, and 2.3 h, respectively. The latter two values are at least as large as those previously obtained with dark pulses of similar durations and circadian phases. A second experiment showed that restricting the activity of hamsters during 3-h dark pulses at CT 9 reduces the amplitude of the phase-shifts. Unrestrained animals phase-advanced by 1.1 h, but this shift was halved in animals whose wheel was locked, and completely abolished in animals confined to nest boxes during the dark pulse. Activity restriction in itself (without dark pulses) had only minimal phase-delaying effects on free-running rhythms when given between ca. CT 10 and CT 13. These results support the idea that, in hamsters at least, dark pulses affect the circadian system mostly by altering behavioural states rather than by altering photic input to the internal clock.Abbreviations CT circadian time - DD constant darkness - LD light-dark - LL constant light - PRC phase response curve - period of rhythm  相似文献   

12.
Converging lines of evidence have firmly established that the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is a light-entrainable circadian oscillator in mammals, critically important for the expression of behavioral and physiological circadian rhythms. Photic information essential for the daily phase resetting of the SCN circadian clock is conveyed directly to the SCN from retinal ganglion cells via the retinohypothalamic tract. The SCN also receives a dense serotonergic innervation arising from the mesencephalic raphe. The terminal fields of retinal and serotonergic afferents within the SCN are co-extensive, and serotonergic agonists can modify the response of the SCN circadian oscillator to light. However, the functional organization and subcellular localization of 5HT receptor subtypes in the SCN are just beginning to be clarified. This information is necessary to understand the role 5HT afferents play in modulating photic input to the SCN. In this paper, we review evidence suggesting that the serotonergic modulation of retinohypothalamic neurotransmission may be achieved via at least two different cellular mechanisms: 1) a postsynaptic mechanism mediated via 5HT1A or 5ht7 receptors located on SCN neurons; and 2) a presynaptic mechanism mediated via 5HT1B receptors located on retinal axon terminals in the SCN. Activation of either of these 5HT receptor mechanisms in the SCN by specific 5HT agonists inhibits the effects of light on circadian function. We hypothesize that 5HT modulation of photic input to the SCN may serve to set the gain of the SCN circadian system to light.  相似文献   

13.
Yellow wrasses (Halichoeres chrysus) show clear daily activity patterns. The fish hide in the substrate at (subjective) night, during the distinct rest phase. Initial entrainment in a 12h:12h light-dark (12:12 LD) cycle (mean period 24.02h, SD 0.27h, n = 16 was followed by a free run (mean period 24.42h, SD 1.33h) after transition into constant dim light conditions. Light pulses of a comparable intensity as used in the light part of the LD cycles did not result in significant phase shifts of the free-running rhythm in constant darkness. Application of much brighter 3h light pulses resulted in a phase-response curve (PRC) for a fish species, with pronounced phase advances during late subjective night. The PRCs differed from those mainly obtained in other vertebrate taxa by the absence of significant phase delays in the early subjective night. At that circadian phase, significant tonic effects of the light pulses caused a shortening of the circadian period length. Entrainment to skeleton photoperiods of 1:11 LD was observed in five of six wrasses exposed, also after a 3h phase advance of this LD cycle. Subsequently, a 1:11.25 LD cycle resulted in entrainment in four of the six fish. It is suggested that the expression of the circadian system in fish can be interpreted as a functional response to a weak natural zeitgeber, as present in the marine environment. This response allows photic entrainment as described here in the yellow wrasse. (Chronobiology International, 17(5), 613–622, 2000)  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
The photosynthesis-deficient ZC mutant ofEuglena gracilis Klebs (strain Z) was cultured at 16°C on an aerated, magnetically stirred, mineral medium containing 0.1% ethanol (pH 7.0). Cell division could be entrained by a 12: 12 light: dark cycle (LD: 12, 12) or even by a one-pulse skeleton photoperiod (LD: 1,23) The rhythm free-ran in DD for at least 8 days with a circadian period (=25.5 h) in populations that had been previously entrained by LD. The freerunning rhythm could be phase-shifted by a single 1-h light pulse (3000 lx). The strong (Type 0) phase-response curve derived from the resetting effects of such signals given at different circadian times was similar to that for the photosynthetic wild-type strain. These results demonstrate that the presence of a functional chloroplast compartment is not necessary for the circadian clock to function inEuglena and suggest that phase resetting of the circadian clock by light occurs via a similar pathway in both photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic cell types.  相似文献   

17.
Brainstem monoaminergic projections to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), and to the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL), appear to modulate both photic and non-photic effects on the circadian system. Recent work in this laboratory has concentrated on the role of noradrenaline in the regulation of circadian period and phase. Previously, this lab has shown that chronic administration of the alpha2 adrenergic agonist, clonidine, to rats maintained in constant light (LL) shortens free-running circadian period and promotes dissociation of rhythmicity, while acute clonidine administration to hamsters produces phase shifts similar to those observed with photic stimuli. These results suggest an interaction between clonidine and photic input on circadian rhythmicity, and so the present study was designed to examine systematically the relationship between chronic clonidine administration and photic input in both rats and hamsters. In DD and low intensity LL, clonidine did not alter free-running circadian wheel-running rhythms of rats, but under moderate to high intensity LL, clonidine significantly reduced the period-lengthening effects of LL. Chronic clonidine administration also altered several aspects of circadian phase in hamsters; phase shifts in response to light pulses of varying intensity at CT 19 were reduced; steady-state entrainment phase under a 24-h light-dark cycle (LD 14:10)was delayed; and synchronization to a 23-h light-dark cycle (LD 13:10) was impaired. Clonidine appeared to have little effect on free-running period of hamsters, but a trend towards dissociation of rhythmicity under LL was observed. These effects may reflect an action of clonidine at the photic input pathways to the circadian system, or directly at the circadian pacemaker, since alpha 2 adrenoceptors have been localized both in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and in several of its projection areas. As both clinical and experimental studies suggest that clonidine may have depressogenic properties, chronic administration of clonidine to rodents may provide an animal model of the alterations in circadian rhythmicity seen in human depression.  相似文献   

18.
A strong stimulus adjusting the circadian clock to the prevailing light-dark cycle is light. However, the circadian clock is reset by light only at specific times of the day. The mechanisms mediating such gating of light input to the CNS are not well understood. There is evidence that Ca2+ ions play an important role in intracellular signaling mechanisms, including signaling cascades stimulated by light. Therefore, Ca2+ is hypothesized to play a role in the light-mediated resetting of the circadian clock. Calbindin-D28k (CB; gene symbol: Calb1) is a Ca2+ binding protein implicated in Ca2+ homeostasis and sensing. The absence of this protein influences Ca2+ buffering capacity of a cell, alters spatio-temporal aspects of intracellular Ca2+ signaling, and hence might alter transmission of light information to the circadian clock in neurons of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). We tested mice lacking a functional Calb1 gene (Calb1?/?) and found an increased phase-delay response to light applied at circadian time (CT) 14 in these animals. This is accompanied by elevated induction of Per2 gene expression in the SCN. Period length and circadian rhythmicity were comparable between Calb1?/? and wild-type animals. Our findings indicate an involvement of CB in the signaling pathway that modulates the behavioral and molecular response to light. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

19.
Summary Hamsters maintained under constant illumination were exposed to 2- or 6-h pulses of darkness at various phases of their circadian activity rhythms. When presented around the time of activity onset, the pulses resulted in phase advances, and when presented toward the end of daily activity, they resulted in phase delays. Since others have shown that light pulses presented at the same phases in constant darkness cause phase shifts in the opposite directions, these results indicate that phase response curves for light and dark pulses are mirror images.Dark pulses also caused phase-dependent changes, both transient and long-lasting, in the period of the free-running rhythms, and a few pulses were immediately followed by splitting of the activity rhythms into two components. Such effects may reflect a differential responsiveness of two coupled oscillators to dark pulses.Abbreviations CT circadian time - DD constant dark - LD lightdark - LL constant light - PRC phase response curve - SD subjective day - SN subjective night - period of a circadian rhythm Supported by grants from the NSERC of Canada to B. Rusak and to G.V. Goddard. We are grateful to Dr. Goddard for his support and encouragement  相似文献   

20.
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