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1.
Summary In the guinea pig with chronically implanted electrodes, neuronal multiple unit activity (MUA) was recorded inside and outside the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Long-term recording of the SCN indicated distinct daily rhythms with a daytime peak in MUA during a 24-h light-dark (LD 1212) cycle. On the other hand, MUA recorded from adjacent hypothalamic regions outside the SCN showed a phase reversal with a nighttime peak, similarly to the rat. The amplitude of the rhythms recorded outside the SCN was much smaller (one-half to one-quarter) than that inside the SCN. These rhythms persisted during constant darkness indicating characteristics of endogenous circadian rhythmicity. When the external lightdark cycle was delayed abruptly for 12 h, MUA rhythms showed a gradual phase shift taking 7–10 days for complete reentrainment. Overt behavior including sleep-wakefulness did not show significant and consistent daily or circadian rhythms in spite of the distinct oscillation in neuronal activity inside the SCN.Abbreviations SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus - MUA multiple unit activity  相似文献   

2.
The circadian system of c-fos deficient mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We examined the role of c-fos in the synchronization of circadian rhythms to environmental light cycles using a line of gene-targeted mice carrying a null mutation at this locus. Circadian locomotor rhythms in mutants had similar periods as wild-type controls but took significantly longer than controls to entrain to 12:12 light-dark cycles. Light-induced phase shifts of rhythms in constant dark were attenuated in mutants although the circadian timing of phase delays and advances was not changed. A functional retinohypothalamic projection was indicated from behavioral results and light-induced jun-B expression in the SCN. The results indicate that while c-fos activation is not an absolute requirement for rhythm generation nor photic responses, it is required for normal entrainment of the mammalian biological clock.Abbreviations SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus - RHT retinohypothalamic tract - IEG immediate early genes - NGF nerve growth factor - VIP vasoactive intestinal polypeptide - DD constant darkness - CT circadian time  相似文献   

3.
Circadian (~24 h) rhythms of cellular network plasticity in the central circadian clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), have been described. The neuronal network in the SCN regulates photic resetting of the circadian clock as well as stability of the circadian system during both entrained and constant conditions. EphA4, a cell adhesion molecule regulating synaptic plasticity by controlling connections of neurons and astrocytes, is expressed in the SCN. To address whether EphA4 plays a role in circadian photoreception and influences the neuronal network of the SCN, we have analyzed circadian wheel‐running behavior of EphA4 knockout (EphA4?/?) mice under different light conditions and upon photic resetting, as well as their light‐induced protein response in the SCN. EphA4?/? mice exhibited reduced wheel‐running activity, longer endogenous periods under constant darkness and shorter periods under constant light conditions, suggesting an effect of EphA4 on SCN function. Moreover, EphA4?/? mice exhibited suppressed phase delays of their wheel‐running activity following a light pulse during the beginning of the subjective night (CT15). Accordingly, light‐induced c‐FOS (FBJ murine osteosarcoma viral oncogene homolog) expression was diminished. Our results suggest a circadian role for EphA4 in the SCN neuronal network, affecting the circadian system and contributing to the circadian response to light.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The nature of the circadian rhythms of the optic lamina-medulla compound eye complex was examined in male crickets Gryllus bimaculatus by recording the multiple unit activity from the optic lobe in situ and in vitro. In most in situ preparations, the neural activity of the complex was higher during the subjective night than during the subjective day, both under constant light and dark. The same pattern was also obtained from nymphal crickets, suggesting that the properties of the pacemaker are common to both nymphs and adults. In a few cases, both diurnal and nocturnal increments in the activity were simultaneously observed, indicating there are two neuronal groups conveying different circadian information. The circadian rhythm was also demonstrated in the optic lobes in vitro, providing evidence that the optic lobe contains the circadian pacemaker that is capable of generating the rhythmicity without any neural or humoral factors from the rest of the animal.Abbreviations DD constant darkness - JST Japanese standard time - LD light to dark cycle - LL constant light  相似文献   

5.
The effects of electrolytic lesions to the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus (SCN) on circadian rhythms of locomotor activity were examined in ruin lizards Podarcis sicula maintained in constant darkness and constant temperature (29°C). All lizards (N=15) in which the lesion damaged 80% or more of the SCN became behaviorally arrhythmic. On the contrary, locomotor rhythms persisted in all cases (N=11) when the SCN remained intact and lesions were confined to neighbouring regions of the preoptic area. Taken together with previous work which demonstrates that the pineal and the retinae are not essential for the persistence of circadian locomotor rhythmicity in Podarcis sicula and with recent evidence showing the homology between the SCN of lizards and those of mammals the present results strongly support the view that the SCN of Podarcis sicula contain the primary pacemaker(s) for locomotor rhythms.Abbreviations DD constant darkness - LL constant light - SCN suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus - PH nucleus periventricularis hypothalami - OC optic chiasm - te length of circadian activity - freerunning circadian period  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian circadian organization is believed to derive primarily from circadian oscillators within the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). The SCN drives circadian rhythms of a wide array of functions (e.g., locomotion, body temperature, and several endocrine processes, including the circadian secretion of the pineal hormone melatonin). In contrast to the situation in several species of reptiles and birds, there is an extensive literature reporting little or no effect of pinealectomy on mammalian circadian rhythms. However, recent research has indicated that the SCN and circadian systems of several mammalian species are highly sensitive to exogenous melatonin, raising the possibility that endogenous pineal hormone may provide feedback in the control of overt circadian rhythms. To determine the role of the pineal gland in rat circadian rhythms, the effects of pinealectomy on locomotor rhythms in constant light (LL) and constant darkness (DD) were studied. The results indicated that the circadian rhythms of pinealectomized rats but not sham-operated controls dissociated into multiple ultradian components in LL and recoupled into circadian patterns only after 12-21 days in DD. The data suggest that pineal feedback may modulate sensitivity to light and/or provide coupling among multiple circadian oscillators within the SCN.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the effects of pinealectomy and blinding (bilateral ocular enucleation) on the circadian locomotor activity rhythm in the Japanese newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster. The pinealectomized newts were entrained to a light-dark cycle of 12 h light and 12 h darkness. After transfer to constant darkness they showed residual rhythmicity for at least several days which was gradually disrupted in prolonged constant darkness. Blinded newts were also entrained to a 12 h light/12 h dark cycle. In subsequent constant darkness they showed free-running rhythms of locomotor activity. However, the freerunning periods noticeably increased compared with those observed in the previous period of constant darkness before blinding. In blinded newts entrained to the light/dark cycle the activity rhythms were gradually disrupted after pinealectomy even in the presence of the light/dark cycle. These results suggest that both the pineal and the eyes are involved in the newt's circadian system, and also suggest that the pineal of the newt acts as an extraretinal photoreceptor which mediates the entrainment of the locomotor activity rhythm.Abbreviations circadian period - DD constant darkness - LD cycle, light-dark cycle - LD 12:12 light-dark cycle of 12 h light and 12 h darkness  相似文献   

8.
Summary Locomotor activity of the male cricketGryllus bimaculatus DeGeer was recorded from the 7th or last (8th) instar nymph. The nymph showed a diurnal rhythm (nymphal rhythm = NR), while the adult, on the contrary, was nocturnal (adult rhythm = AR) (Fig. 1). This rhythm reversal occurred suddenly 3 to 5 days after the imaginal molt, almost simultaneously with the first spermatophore formation and the start of stridulation (calling song) (Fig. 2). In addition to the antiphase relationship, both rhythms also differed in the freerunning period (tau) and wave form. Tauscdd was significantly longer in NR (24.33 h) than in AR (23.91 h) (Fig. 3). AR was characterized by a sharp activity peak in each cycle, which NR, however, lacked (Fig. 1, 3, 6). On the basis of these differences, two possibilities are discussed; one is that NR and AR are separate oscillations and the other is that both are coupled to different phase points of one oscillation.Abbreviations LD light dark - DD constant darkness - LL constant light - NR nymphal rhythm - AR adult rhythm  相似文献   

9.
Summary Many circadian rhythms in mammals are regulated by the suprachiasmatic nuclei located in the anterior hypothalamus. The suprachiasmatic nuclei are a heterogeneous population of neurons loosely segregated into regions. In an effort to determine if a regional specificity of control of different circadian rhythms exists within the SCN, the effect of small electrolytic lesions of the suprachiasmatic nuclei was examined on two parameters which are known to depend on the circadian system for their normal expression: wheel-running activity and short-day induced testicular regression. While some SCN lesions altered both the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity and the normal temporal pattern of gonadal regression on short-days, other partial lesions of the suprachiasmatic nuclei were found to effect one parameter without effecting the other. Detailed histological analysis of the neural damage sustained by the suprachiasmatic nuclei did not indicate an obvious regional specificity of function within the nuclei. However, the results do suggest that functionally specific neural pathways emerging from the suprachiasmatic nuclei carry circadian information to independent neural circuits responsible for locomotor activity and neuroendocrine-gonadal function.Abbreviations SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus - SCG superior cervical ganglion - NAT N-acetyltransferase - LD light/dark cycle - DD constant darkness - circadian period - phase angle of entrainment - HRP horseradish peroxidase - SEM standard error of the mean - vPVN hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus - DMH hypothalamic dorsomedial nucleus - PVT thalamic paraventricular nucleus - IMLN intermediolateral nucleus  相似文献   

10.
Early light experience influences the brain during development. Perinatal light exposure has an important effect on the development of the circadian system, although the role of quantity versus quality of light in this process is still unclear. We tested the development of the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity under constant bright light from the day of weaning, of six groups of rats raised under different light conditions during suckling. Results indicated that when rats received daily darkness during suckling (rats reared under constant darkness or light-dark cycles with dim or bright light) became arrhythmic when exposed to continuous bright light after weaning. However, those rats reared in the absence of darkness (constant dim or bright light, or alternating dim and bright light) developed a circadian rhythm, which was stronger and had a shorter period depending on the quantity of light received during suckling. Vasointestinal polypeptide immunoreactivity in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) was higher in those rats with weaker rhythms. However, no apparent differences among these groups were found in the melanopsin-expressing retinal ganglion cells, which provide the SCN with light input in the photoentrainment process. When bright light was shifted to dim light in three of the groups on day 57 after weaning, all of them generated a circadian rhythm with a longer period in those rats previously arrhythmic. Our results indicate the importance of the amount of light received at the early stages of life in the development of the circadian system and suggest that darkness is needed for the normal development of circadian behaviour.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The rhythm of autophagic degradation (AV) in visual cell inner segments shows circadian characteristics: it persists under constant conditions of continuous darkness (DD) and continuous light (LL) and can be reentrained to phase-shifts of the light-dark (LD) cycle. However, unlike the rhythm of disk-shedding and many other circadian rhythms, the rhythm of AV persists with a distinct peak even after 3 days of LL and is rapidly abolished to almost baseline levels after 1.5 days of DD, confirming our previous observations of a strong light-dependence of AV. Since the rhythms of disk-shedding and AV reveal this inverse pattern in DD and LL, different regulative mechanisms may be involved.Light stimulation with increasing intensities at day-time and night-time evoked AV responses that increased and disk-shedding responses that decreased at higher intensities. Furthermore, both the AV and phagosome response was different according to day-time or night-time stimulation, pointing towards the possibility of a circadian phase of sensitivity to light.Abbreviations AV autophagic degradation, autophagic vacuole, autophay - LD light dark cycle - DD constant darkness - LL constant light - CNS central nervous system - SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus - DA dopamine - ftc footcandle - ANOVA analysis of variance  相似文献   

12.
Circadian regulation of behavior worsens with age, however, the mechanism behind this phenomenon is still poorly understood. Specifically, it is not clear to what extend the ability of the circadian clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) to generate the rhythm is affected by aging. This study aimed to ascertain the effect of aging on the functioning of the SCN of mPer2Luciferase mice under unnatural lighting conditions, such as constant light (LL). Under LL, which worsened the age-induced effect on behavioral rhythms, a marginal age-dependent effect on in vitro rhythmicity in explants containing the middle, but not the rostral/caudal, regions of the SCN was apparent; the proportion of mice in which middle-region SCN explants were completely arrhythmic or had an extremely long period (>30 h) was 47% in aged mice and 27% in adults. The results suggest that in some of the aged animals, LL may weaken the coupling among oscillators in specific sub-regions of the SCN, leaving other sub-regions better synchronized. In the standard light/dark cycle and in constant darkness, the SCN ability to produce bioluminescence rhythms in vitro was not compromised in aged mice although aging significantly affected their SCN-driven locomotor activity rhythms. Therefore, our results demonstrate that although age worsened the SCN output rhythm, the SCN molecular core clock mechanism itself was relatively resilient to aging in these same animals. The results suggest the involvement of pathways downstream of the core clock mechanism which are responsible for this phenomenon.  相似文献   

13.
Surgical isolation of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) within a hypothalamic island is reported to produce loss of circadian rhythmicity. The results have been interpreted to indicate that SCN efferents are necessary for the expression of circadian rhythms. It is not clear, however, whether the loss of circadian rhythms in behavioral responses following SCN isolation is attributable to transection of efferents, to loss of cells within the island, or to gliosis produced by the knife cut. To explore this issue, we examined locomotor activity and gonadal state of male golden hamsters housed in constant darkness (DD, with a dim red light for maintenance) for at least 10 weeks following isolation of the SCN from the rest of the brain by cuts by means of a Halasz wire microknife. Brain sections were immunocytochemically stained for the peptides vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), vasopressin (VP) or neurophysin II (NP II), and neuropeptide Y (NPY) to localize the SCN and to assess its viability, and for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) to delimit the border of the knife cut. Experimental animals with VIP and VP/NP II immunoreactivity in the SCN within the island retained free-running locomotor rhythms following transection of SCN efferents. Animals with cuts that failed to sever SCN efferents, and sham-operated animals (in which the Halasz knife was lowered but not rotated), also maintained circadian rhythmicity. Hamsters sustaining severe damage to the SCN showed disrupted locomotor activity. In those hamsters that retained circadian locomotor rhythmicity following SCN isolation, gonads failed to regress in DD, demonstrating the absence of an appropriate photoperiodic response. The results suggest a multiplicity of SCN coupling mechanisms in the control of circadian rhythms.  相似文献   

14.
Somatostatin is synthesized in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), a circadian pacemaker in mammals. To explore the functional significance of somatostatin in the circadian system, we examined rhythms of rat locomotor activity and electrical firing rate of SCN neurons in the brain slice after temporal depletion of somatostatin levels in the SCN. Intraperitoneal administration of cysteamine (200 mg/kg), a somatostatin depletor, significantly reduced somatostatin level in the in vivo SCN 5 min after injection and kept low level as long as 3 to 4 days. This administration, on the other hand, induced significant phase advances of about 51 min in the subsequent free-running rhythm of locomotor activity of the rat. A marked phase advance in the circadian rhythm of firing rate in the SCN was also observed after administration of cysteamine in coronal hypothalamic slices. These persistent phase shifts after administration of a somatostatin depletor may suggest that the change of somatostatin level in the SCN have a feedback influence on the circadian pacemaker.Abbreviations SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus - AVP arginine-vasopressin - VIP vasoactive intestinal polypeptide - CT circadian time - ZT zeitgeber time - i.p. intraperitoneally - 12L:12D 12 h light and 12 h dark - ANOVA analysis of variance  相似文献   

15.
Exposure to constant light abolishes circadian behavioral rhythms of locomotion and feeding as well as circulating melatonin rhythms in pigeons (Columba livia). To determine if feeding rhythmicity could be maintained in pigeons exposed to constant light, periodic infusions (10h/day) of melatonin were administered to pinealectomized and bilaterally retinectomized/pinealectomized pigeons under conditions of both constant darkness and constant light. The infusions were sufficient to entrain rhythmicity in pinealectomized pigeons in constant darkness and to restore and maintain rhythmicity in bilaterally retinectomized/pinealectomized pigeons in constant darkness. On subsequent exposure to constant light, rhythmicity remained phase locked to the melatonin infusions in bilaterally retinectomized/pinealectomized pigeons but was abolished in sighted pinealectomized birds. These results suggest that while endogenous melatonin rhythms are both necessary and sufficient to maintain behavioral rhythms in DD, their effect can be overridden by constant light but only if perceived by the eyes. Thus, constant light may abolish behavioral rhythmicity in intact pigeons (and perhaps in other species) by a mechanism other than suppression of endogenous melatonin rhythmicity. Such a mechanism might involve direct stimulation of locomotor or feeding activity by retinally perceived (but not by extra-retinally perceived) light, or alternatively by suppression of a hypothalamic oscillator that receives its major light input from the retinae.Abbreviations PX pinealectomized - EX bilaterally enucleated - LD light:dark cycle - LL constant light - DD constant darkness - DDb constant darkness before exposure to constant light - DDa constant darkness after exposure to constant light  相似文献   

16.
Behavioral responses of Vipr2-/- mice to light   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and its receptor, VPAC2, play important roles in the functioning of the dominant circadian pacemaker, located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). Mice lacking VPAC2 receptors (Vipr2-/-) show altered circadian rhythms and impaired synchronization to environmental lighting cues. However, light can increase phosphoprotein and immediate early gene expression in the Vipr2-/- SCN demonstrating that the circadian clock is readily responsive to light in these mice. It is not clear whether these neurochemical responses to light can be transduced to behavioral changes as seen in wild-type (WT) animals. In this study we investigated the diurnal and circadian wheel-running profile of WT (C57BL/6J) and Vipr2-/- mice under a 12-h light:12-h complete darkness (LD) lighting schedule and in constant darkness (DD) and used 1-h light pulses to shift the activity of mice in DD. Unlike WT mice, Vipr2-/- mice show grossly altered locomotor patterns making the analysis of behavioral responses to light problematic. However, analyses of both the onset and the offset of locomotor activity reveal that in a subset of these mice, light can reset the offset of behavioral rhythms during the subjective night. This suggests that the SCN clock of Vipr2-/- mice and the rhythms it generates are responsive to photic stimulation and that these responses can be integrated to whole animal behavioral changes.  相似文献   

17.
The “core” region of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), a central clock responsible for coordinating circadian rhythms, shows a daily rhythm in phosphorylation of extracellular regulated kinase (pERK). This cellular rhythm persists under constant darkness and, despite the absence of light, is dependent upon inputs from the eye. The neural signals driving this rhythmicity remain unknown and here the roles of glutamate and PACAP are examined. First, rhythmic phosphorylation of the NR1 NMDA receptor subunit (pNR1, a marker for receptor activation) was shown to coincide with SCN core pERK, with a peak at circadian time (CT) 16. Enucleation and intraocular TTX administration attenuated the peak in the pERK and pNR1 rhythms, demonstrating that activation of the NMDA receptor and ERK in the SCN core at CT16 are dependent on retinal inputs. In contrast, ERK and NR1 phosphorylation in the SCN shell region were unaffected by these treatments. Intraventricular administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 also attenuated the peak in SCN core pERK, indicating that ERK phosphorylation in this region requires NMDA receptor activation. As PACAP is implicated in photic entrainment and is known to modulate glutamate signaling, the effects of a PAC1 receptor antagonist (PACAP 6-38) on SCN core pERK and pNR1 also were examined. PACAP 6-38 administration attenuated SCN core pERK and pNR1, suggesting that PACAP induces pERK directly, and indirectly via a modulation of NMDA receptor signaling. Together, these data indicate that, in the absence of light, retinal-mediated NMDA and PAC1 receptor activation interact to induce cellular rhythms in the SCN core. These results highlight a novel function for glutamate and PACAP release in the hamster SCN apart from their well-known roles in the induction of photic circadian clock resetting.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The locomotor activity of the millipede Glyphiulus cavernicolus (Spirostreptida), which occupies the deeper recesses of a cave, was monitored in light-dark (LD) cycles (12h light and 12h darkness), constant darkness (DD), and constant light (LL) conditions. These millipedes live inside the cave and are apparently never exposed to any periodic factors of the environment such as light-dark, temperature, and humidity cycles. The activity of a considerable fraction of these millipedes was found to show circadian rhythm, which entrained to a 12:12 LD cycle with maximum activity during the dark phase of the LD cycle. Under constant darkness (DD), 56.5% of the millipedes (n = 23) showed circadian rhythms, with average free-running period of 25.7h ± 3.3h (mean ± SD, range 22.3h to 35.0h). The remaining 43.5% of the millipedes, however, did not show any clear-cut rhythm. Under DD conditions following an exposure to LD cycles, 66.7% (n = 9) showed faint circadian rhythm, with average free-running period of 24.0h ± 0.8h (mean ± SD, range 22.9h to 25.2h). Under constant light (LL) conditions, only 2 millipedes of 11 showed free-running rhythms, with average period length of 33.3h ± 1.3h. The results suggest that these cave-dwelling millipedes still possess the capacity to measure time and respond to light and dark situations. (Chronobiology International, 17(6), 757–765, 2000)  相似文献   

20.
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   

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