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1.
Circadian rhythms in physiological processes and behaviors were compared with hypothalamic circadian rhythms in norepinephrine (NE) metabolites, adrenergic transmitter receptors, cAMP, cGMP and suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) arginine vasopressin (AVP) in a single population of rats under D: D conditions. Eating, drinking and locomotor activity were high during the subjective night (the time when lights were out in L: D) and low during the subjective day (the time when lights were on in L: D). Plasma corticosterone concentration rose at subjective dusk and remained high until subjective dawn. Binding to hypothalamic α1- and β-adrenergic receptors also peaked during the subjective night. Cyclic cGMP concentration was elevated throughout the 24-hr period except for a trough at dusk, whereas DHPG concentration peaked at dawn. Arginine vasopressin levels in the suprachiasmatic nucleus peaked in the middle of the day. No rhythm was found either in binding to the α2-adrenergic receptor, or in MHPG or cAMP concentration. Behavioral and corticosterone rhythms, therefore, are parallel to rhythms in hypothalamic α1-and β-receptor binding and NE-release. Cyclic GMP falls only at dusk, suggesting the possibility that cGMP inhibits activity much of the day and that at dusk the inhibition of nocturnal activity is removed. SCN AVP, on the other hand, peaking at 1400 hr, may play a role in the pacemaking function of the SCN that drives these other rhythms.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of the present study was to examine arylalkylamine N‐acetyltransferase (AANAT) activity and melatonin content in the pineal gland and retina as well as the melatonin concentration in plasma of the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), an avian species in which several physiological processes, including reproduction, are controlled by day length. In order to investigate whether the analyzed parameters display diurnal or circadian rhythmicity, we measured these variables in tissues isolated at regular time intervals from birds kept either under a regular light‐dark (LD) cycle or under constant darkness (DD). The pineal gland and retina of the turkey rhythmically produced melatonin. In birds kept under a daily LD cycle, melatonin levels in the pineal gland and retina were high during the dark phase and low during the light phase. Rhythmic oscillations in melatonin, with high night‐time concentrations, were also found in the plasma. The pineal and retinal melatonin rhythms mirrored oscillations in the activity of AANAT, the penultimate enzyme in the melatonin biosynthetic pathway. Rhythmic oscillations in AANAT activity in the turkey pineal gland and retina were circadian in nature, as they persisted under conditions of constant darkness (DD). Transferring birds from LD into DD, however, resulted in a potent decline in the amplitude of the AANAT rhythm from the first day of DD. On the sixth day of DD, pineal AANAT activity was still markedly higher during the subjective dark than during the subjective light phase; whereas, AANAT activity in the retina did not exhibit significant oscillations. The results indicate that melatonin rhythmicity in the turkey pineal gland and retina is regulated both by light and the endogenous circadian clock. The findings suggest that environmental light may be of primary importance in the maintenance of the high‐amplitude melatonin rhythms in the turkey.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The ocular circadian rhythm of compound action potential frequency in Bulla gouldiana is driven by rhythmic changes in the membrane potential of putative circadian pacemaker cells. Changes in the membrane potential of these neurons is required for light-induced phase shifts of the rhythm. We have tested the proposition that these changes in membrane potential reflect underlying changes in ionic conductances. We have found that: 1. Membrane conductance in the dark is highest during the subjective night when the cells are hyperpolarized, decreases as the cells depolarize spontaneously near projected dawn and is lowest during the subjective day. The changes in membrane potential and conductance follow a similar time course. 2. Long pulses of light delivered to eyes during their subjective night produce a characteristic response: There is initially a large, phasic depolarization accompanied by a burst of CAPs; this is followed by a repolarizing phase during which CAP activity is reduced to zero; and finally a tonic depolarization develops that is accompanied by a resumption of CAP activity at a steady rate. 3. During the subjective night, the tonic depolarization is accompanied by a decrease in conductance compared to the previous dark value. However, light pulses of similar duration delivered to eyes during their subjective day causes tonic depolarizations and increased CAP activity, but no measurable change in conductance. 4. Membrane responses to light are sensitive to agents that reduce Ca2+ flux. Light pulses during the subjective night produce a phasic depolarization, but the repolarization phase is eliminated in low Ca2+/EGTA seawater and is reduced in 5 mM Ni2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
W. -E. Mayer 《Planta》1981,152(4):292-301
The energy requirements of the various phases of the circadian clock in the laminar pulvini cells of primary leaves of Phaseolus coccineus L. were investigated using 4-h pulses of NaCN (5 mM) and NaN3 (1 mM). The induced phase shifts were calculated from the timing of the subjective night position during the third cycle after the treatment. Both inhibitors produce advances during phases which are correlated with the upward movement of the leaf (ca. 0–12 h after the maximum of the subjective night position) and during phases which are correlated with the downward movement of the leaf (ca. 20–28 h after the maximum of the subjective night position). Maximal advances are induced during the phase which is correlated with the maximum of the subjective night position (hour 0), whereas during phases which are correlated with the subjective day position (ca. 12–20 h after the maximum of the subjective night position) the inhibitors have no effect or induce only small advances. These results demonstrate that the part of the circadian cycle which, according to Bünning's tension-relaxation model of the circadian clock, is characterized by features of relaxation, represents a sequence of phases with decreasing energy requirement, whereas the tension part of the circadian cycle represents a sequence of phases with increasing energy requirement. The energy requirement for changing and maintaining the leaf positions was investigated by continuously offering NaCN, NaN3, and dinitrophenol (DNP) to leaves with intact and half (flexor cut away) pulvini. The substances inhibit in both pulvini the upward movement or induce a downward movement, depending on the leaf position, when the transfer to the inhibitor solution takes place. These results give evidence that the movement of intact pulvini reflects the turgor (volume) state of the extensor cells and that the increase of turgor (volume) and high turgor (volume) state requires more energy than the decrease of turgor (volume) or low turgor (small volume) state. Therefore, the time course of the energy requirements of the circadian clock and the clock-controlled turgor (volume states or leaf movement) is out of phase during a circadian cycle. Consequently the reaction of the clock-controlled leaf movement to the reduced energy supply can mask the clock behavior in pulse and step experiments. The phase response curves towards CN- and N 3 - reflect the time course of the CN--induced membrane depolarizations (the energy requirement of the electrogenic pump) in extensor cells of the pulvinus (Freudling et al. (1980), Plant Physiol. 65, 966–968), and both are out of phase with the time course of the energy requirement of the turgor. Consequently it is hypothesized that in Phaseolus advances are due to membrane depolarization and that at least in this organism electric properties of the plasmalemma are essentially involved in the mechanism of the circadian clock.Abbreviations LD light-dark cycle - LL continuous light - DNP dinitrophenol This paper is dedicated to Professor Erwin Bünning on the occasion of his 75th birthdayIn this paper zero corresponds to the second maximum of the subjective night position of the leaves after transfer to constant conditions. Zero to twelve hours corresponds approximately to the upward movement of the leaves, 12–20 h to the elevated (subjective day) position, and 20–28 h to the downward movement of the leaves. In other circadian systems Pittendrigh's CT (circadian time) convention is used. CT 00 is the time of dawn after a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle. Since in Phaseolus the plants are raised in a LD cycle different from 12:12 and since the phases at dawn differ considerably from leaf to leaf and are furthermore not precisely determinable (whereas the subjective night position of the leaves is a well-defined and recognizable phase) this convention is not followed in Phaseolus. Phase zero in Phaseolus corresponds to approximately CT 18 in other systems  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
《Chronobiology international》2013,30(8):1011-1020
Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) contain circadian clocks driving melatonin synthesis during the day, a subset of these cells acting as nonvisual photoreceptors sending photic information to the brain. In this work, the authors investigated the temporal and light regulation of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AA-NAT) activity, a key enzyme in melatonin synthesis. The authors first examined this activity in RGCs of wild-type chickens and compared it to that in photoreceptor cells (PRs) from animals maintained for 48?h in constant dark (DD), light (LL), or regular 12-h:12-h light-dark (LD) cycle. AA-NAT activity in RGCs displayed circadian rhythmicity, with highest levels during the subjective day in both DD and LL as well as in the light phase of the LD cycle. In contrast, AA-NAT activity in PRs exhibited the typical nocturnal peak in DD and LD, but no detectable oscillation was observed under LL, under which conditions the levels were basal at all times examined. A light pulse of 30–60?min significantly decreased AA-NAT activity in PRs during the subjective night, but had no effect on RGCs during the day or night. Intraocular injection of dopamine (50 nmol/eye) during the night to mimic the effect of light presented significant inhibition of AA-NAT activity in PRs compared to controls but had no effect on RGCs. The results clearly demonstrate that the regulation of the diurnal increase in AA-NAT activity in RGCs of chickens undergoes a different control mechanism from that observed in PRs, in which the endogenous clock, light, and dopamine exhibited differential effects. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

8.
Circadian rhythms in physiological processes and behaviors were compared with hypothalamic circadian rhythms in norepinephrine (NE) metabolites, adrenergic transmitter receptors, cAMP, cGMP and suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) arginine vasopressin (AVP) in a single population of rats under D:D conditions. Eating, drinking and locomotor activity were high during the subjective night (the time when lights were out in L:D) and low during the subjective day (the time when lights were on in L:D). Plasma corticosterone concentration rose at subjective dusk and remained high until subjective dawn. Binding to hypothalamic alpha 1- and beta-adrenergic receptors also peaked during the subjective night. Cyclic cGMP concentration was elevated throughout the 24-hr period except for a trough at dusk, whereas DHPG concentration peaked at dawn. Arginine vasopressin levels in the suprachiasmatic nucleus peaked in the middle of the day. No rhythm was found either in binding to the alpha 2-adrenergic receptor, or in MHPG or cAMP concentration. Behavioral and corticosterone rhythms, therefore, are parallel to rhythms in hypothalamic alpha 1- and beta-receptor binding and NE-release. Cyclic GMP falls only at dusk, suggesting the possibility that cGMP inhibits activity much of the day and that at dusk the inhibition of nocturnal activity is removed. SCN AVP, on the other hand, peaking at 1400 hr, may play a role in the pacemaking function of the SCN that drives these other rhythms.  相似文献   

9.
Photic phase response curves (PRCs) have been extensively studied in many laboratory-bred diurnal and nocturnal rodents. However, comparatively fewer studies have addressed the effects of photic cues on wild diurnal mammals. Hence, we studied the effects of short durations of light pulses on the circadian systems of the diurnal Indian Palm squirrel, Funambulus pennanti. Adult males entrained to a light–dark cycle (12?h–12?h) were transferred to constant darkness (DD). Free-running animals were exposed to brief light pulses (250 lux) of 15?min, 3 circadian hours (CT) apart (CT 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18 and 21). Phase shifts evoked at different phases were plotted against CT and a PRC was constructed. F. pennanti exhibited phase-dependent phase shifts at all the CTs studied, and the PRC obtained was of type 1 at the intensity of light used. Phase advances were evoked during the early subjective day and late subjective night, while phase delays occurred during the late subjective day and early subjective night, with maximum phase delay at CT 15 (?2.04?±?0.23?h), and maximum phase advance at CT 21 (1.88?±?0.31?h). No dead zone was seen at this resolution. The free-running period of the rhythm was concurrently lengthened (deceleration) during the late subjective day and early subjective night, while period shortening (acceleration) occurred during the late subjective night. The maximum deceleration was noticed at CT 15 (?0.40?±?0.09?h) and the maximum acceleration at CT 21 (0.39?±?0.07?h). A significant positive correlation exists between the phase shifts and the period changes (r?=?0.684, p?=?0.001). The shapes of both the PRC and period response curve (τRC) qualitatively resemble each other. This suggests that the palm squirrel’s circadian system is entrained both by phase and period responses to light. Thus, F. pennanti exhibits robust clock-resetting in response to light pulses.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
1.  Coupling mechanisms between ciliary beating and the membrane potential in Paramecium were investigated under voltage clamp applying intracellular pressure injection of cAMP, cGMP and Ca-EGTA buffer. Ciliary responses following step changes in membrane potential were recorded by high-speed video on magnetic tape.
2.  Injections of cAMP and cGMP up to millimolar concentrations caused no detectable changes in the frequency voltage relationship. A minor effect was that the ciliary reorientation towards the anterior cell end (reversal) tended to be inhibited with depolarization up to 10 mV.
3.  Injection of Ca2+ into the cell clamped at the resting potential caused a transient anteriad ciliary reorientation and a simultaneous increase in the beating frequency.
4.  Injection of EGTA (to buffer Ca2+ below 10–8 M) was ineffective in relation to frequency for several minutes. After this time, hyperpolarization- and depolarization activated frequency responses of EGTA-injected cells were increasingly inhibited. The ciliary reorientation following depolarization was not affected by EGTA.
5.  A posterior contraction of the cell diameter was noticed upon membrane hyperpolarization. The contraction coincided in time with the increase in beating frequency.
6.  The results support the view that the voltage-dependent augmentation of the ciliary beating rate is not directly mediated by an intracellular increase in either cAMP or cGMP.
7.  The role of Ca2+ as intracellular messenger in the ciliary and somatic compartments is discussed.
  相似文献   

12.
We studied the locomotor rhythmicity in heptapterine catfishes, genus Taunayia, under free-running conditions (DD) and LD cycles (12:12). Taunayia sp., anophthalmic and depigmented undescribed species from a cave in northeastern Brazil, is the fourth Brazilian troglobitic catfish studied with focus on circadian rhythms. Weak free-running rhythmicity, with absence of significant circadian components, was observed for this species when compared to the epigean, eyed relatives. On the other hand, the studied troglobitic catfishes in general presented significant circadian rhythms under LD cycles, with activity peaks in the night phase probably corresponding to nocturnal activity pattern inherited from their epigean ancestors. However, no residual oscillations were observed after transition from LD to DD. This indicates masking of activity by light-dark cycles. Regression of circadian rhythmicity in the stable, permanently dark subterranean habitat was also observed for other cave fishes. Such regression corroborates the notion that circadian rhythmicity is mainly selected in the epigean environment by ecological factors, namely daily cycles of light and/or temperature.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A doublet of proteins (48,000M r) from theParamecium cell body membrane fits several criteria for the external cAMP chemoreceptor. These criteria include: (i) selective elution from a cAMP affinity column, matching a specificity that could be predicted from the behavioral response and whole-cell binding; (ii) binding to wheat germ agglutinin indicating the presence of carbohydrate moieties indicating surface exposure; and (iii) selective inhibition of the intact cells' chemoresponse to cAMP by antibodies against the doublet. Additional evidence for the existence of a receptor, in general, comes from selective elimination of the cAMP chemoresponse by photoaffinity labeling of whole cells with 8-N3-cAMP. The doublet proteins are not identical to the regulatory subunit of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase fromParamecium, theDictyostelium cAMP chemoreceptor, or the 42–45 kDa range proteins related to the large surface glycoprotein inParamecium. The doublet proteins are not readily separable and, as inDictyostelium, may represent two different covalent modification states of the same protein. Amino acid analysis indicates that the proteins are similar, but does not distinguish between the possibilities of proteolysis and covalent modification. Once cloned, this doublet may prove to be only the fifth external, eukaryotic chemoreceptor to be identified.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Light and serotonin were found to cause phase shifts of the circadian neural activity rhythm in the optic lobe of the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus cultured in vitro. The two phase-shifting agents yielded phase-response curves different in shape. Light induced phase delay and advance in the early and late subjective night, respectively, and almost no shifts in the subjective day, whereas serotonin phase-advances the clock during the subjective day and induced delay shifts during the subjective night. The largest phase advance and delay occurred at circadian time 21 and 12, respectively, for light, and circadian time 3 and 18, respectively, for serotonin. Quipazine, a nonspecific serotonin agonist, induced phase advance and phase delay at circadian time 3 and 18, respectively, like serotonin. (±)8-OH-DPAT, a specific 5-HT1A agonist, phase delayed by 2 h at the subjective night, but produced no significant phase shifts at the subjective day. When NAN-190, a specific 5-HT1A antagonist, was applied together with quipazine, it completely blocked the phase delay at circadian time 18, whereas it had no effect on the advance shifts induced by quipazine. The results suggest that the phase dependency of serotonin-induced phase shifts of the clock may be partly attributable to the daily change in receptor type. Accepted: 4 July 1999  相似文献   

16.
A unicellular organism, Paramecium, exhibits circadian rhythm activities in many physiological phenomena, i.e., mating reactivity, photoaccumulation in Paramecium bursaria and mating type reversals in Paramecium multimicronucleatum. In this study, we used an image-processing system to analyze swimming activity in a population of Paramecium multimicronucleatum cultured axenically under 12 h-light/12 h-dark cycles (LD 1212). Swimming behavior was recorded both under LD 1212 and constant darkness and images tracing the tracks of Paramecium were produced every 4 min. Swimming activity was represented by the occupied area by the tracks relative to the total observed area. It is high during daytime and low at night and exhibits a freerunning rhythm in constant darkness. Furthermore, criteria for two major components of swimming behavior, straight and circle swimming, were established and analyzed. The results indicate that swimming behavior alters depending on the time of day: straight swimming increased during the day and circling was dominant around dusk both under LD 1212 and constant darkness.Abbreviations ZT Zeitgeber Time - LD 1212 12h- light/12h-dark cycles - TF transversing frequency  相似文献   

17.
In many moths, male attraction to the blend of synthetic sex pheromone releasing continuously in the field shows an apparent circadian rhythm similar to that of locomotion activity. In this study, the daily rhythms of electroantennography (EAG) and behavioral responses to sex pheromone, and the daily rhythms of locomotion activity were measured in male beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). The peaks of males trapped by light and sex pheromone were all during the latter part of the night in the field. However, there was no significant variation among time intervals in the EAG responses of male antennae to sex pheromone stimuli. The principal period of locomotion activity under L15:D9 (LD) continued to occur during the scotophase and the subjective scotophase in the day of constant darkness (DD1) and the second of two consecutive days of constant darkness (DD2). The majority of males contacted the sex pheromone source in a wind tunnel during the latter part of the scotophase under LD and the subjective scotophase for DD1 and DD2. There were significant associations between the rhythm of the behavioral response to sex pheromone and locomotion activity. These results suggested that the male's behavioral response to sex pheromone in the beet armyworm could be observed only until locomotion activity of the male occurred at the end of the dark period, despite sex pheromone being released continuously from synthetic pheromone‐baited traps in the field.  相似文献   

18.
Summary N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity in pineal glands exhibits a circadian rhythm with peak activity occurring in the dark-time. We previously showed that inGallus domesticus chicks pretreated with LD12:12, NAT activity was increased by dark exposure (peak dark sensitivity occurred during the expected dark-time) or decreased by light at night (peak light sensitivity occurred early in the night during the time of dark sensitivity). In this study we mapped dark sensitivity vs time (for NAT activity increase in response to 2 h dark pulses), and light sensitivity vs time (for NAT activity decrease in response to 10 min or 30 min light pulses) over a cycle for 3-week old chicks,Gallus domesticus, pretreated with long (LD16:8) or short photoperiod (LD8:16). Sensitivity to light was increased in the second 8 h after L/D by LD8:16. Sensitivity to dark was increased in the first 8 h after L/D by LD16:8.Abbreviations LD16:8 a light-dark cycle consisting of 16 h of light alternating with 8 h of dark - LD8:16 a light-dark cycle consisting of 8 h of light alternating with 16 h of dark - DD constant dark - LL constant light - L/D lights-off - D/L lights-on - NAT pineal serotonin N-acetyltransferase - NAT activity is given in nmoles/pineal gland/h - chick used here to denote a young bird of either sex of the speciesGallus domesticus from hatching to three weeks of age  相似文献   

19.
Summary Veratridine opens voltage-dependent Na+ channels in many metazoans. InParamecium, which has voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and a Ca/K action potential, no such Na+ channels are known. A Ca-inward current is correlated to an intracellular increase in cGMP. The addition of veratridine toParamecium wildtype and to pawn mutant cells, which lack the Ca-inward current, transiently increased intracellular levels of cGMP about sevenfold to 40 pmol/mg protein. A half-maximal effect was obtained with 250 m veratridine. The increase in cGMP was maximal about 15 sec after the addition of veratridine and declined rapidly afterwards. Intracellular cAMP levels were not affected. The effect of veratridine on cGMP was dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+. The time dependence and extent of stimulation closely resembled the effects observed after stimulation by Ba2+, which causes the repetitive firing of action potentials, Ca-dependent ciliary reversal, and cGMP formation. The effects of Ba2+ and veratridine were not additive. Wildtype cells and, surprisingly, also pawn mutant cells showed avoiding reactions upon addition of veratridine indicating that it induced a Ca2+ influx into the cilia, which causes ciliary reversal. The potency of veratridine to stimulate cGMP formation was little affected by Na+ in wildtype cells, three pawn mutant strains, and in the cell line fast-2, which is defective in a Ca-dependent Na-inward current. Divalent cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, and Ba2+) inhibited the effects the veratridine similar to metazoan cells. The results indicate that veratridine can open the voltage-operated Ca2+ channels inParamecium wildtype and, most interestingly, in pawn mutant cells. The pawn mutation is suggested to represent a defect in the activation of the Ca2+ channel. This explains the lack of differences in ciliary proteins between wildtype and pawn cells reported earlier.  相似文献   

20.
Circadian changes in protein synthesis and phosphorylation of ribosomal and cytoplasmic proteins in the marine dinoflagellate Gonyaulax polyedra were analyzed by radioactive labeling and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Maximal rates of protein synthesis were found during the subjective night and minimal rates during the subjective day. Protein synthesis was inhibited by heat shock to a different extent at different circadian phases—maximally during the subjective night. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) having molecular weights of approximately 105, 89, 83, 66, 35, and 18 kDa were induced by these treatments. Induction of HSP89 and HSP35 showed circadian differences with maximal synthesis rates at CT 15, whereas most HSPs maintained a constant constitutive and induced synthesis. Recovery of normal protein synthesis after heat shock occurred faster during the subjective night than during the subjective day. Ribosomal proteins with molecular weights of 16 and 18 kDa were highly phosphorylated by [35S] thio gamma adenosine triphosphate during day phase in a light-dark cycle or at CT 6 in constant dim light and labeled only to a minor degree during night phase or at CT 18. A ribosome-associated protein (35 kDa) was labeled during the day and not during the night, but after heat shock during both day and night. In the 200,000 g cytosolic fraction, a 35-kDa protein was found to be more intensely labeled at night than during the day phase after heat shock. The results of this study show a correlation between circadian changes in the overall protein synthesis and ribosomal protein phosphorylation. The rhythm of protein synthesis and phosphorylation of a ribosome-associated protein are drastically altered by heat shock and dependent on the circadian phase.  相似文献   

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