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1.
Although circadian rhythms are found in many peripheral tissues in insects, the control mechanism is still to be elucidated. To investigate the central and peripheral relationships in the circadian organization, circadian rhythms outside the optic lobes were examined in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus by measuring mRNA levels of period (per) and timeless (tim) genes in the brain, terminal abdominal ganglion (TAG), anterior stomach, mid-gut, testis, and Malpighian tubules. Except for Malpighian tubules and testis, the tissues showed a daily rhythmic expression in either both per and tim or tim alone in LD. Under constant darkness, however, the tested tissues exhibited rhythmic expression of per and tim mRNAs, suggesting that they include a circadian oscillator. The amplitude and the levels of the mRNA rhythms varied among those rhythmic tissues. Removal of the optic lobe, the central clock tissue, differentially affected the rhythms: the anterior stomach lost the rhythm of both per and tim; in the mid-gut and TAG, tim expression became arrhythmic but per maintained rhythmic expression; a persistent rhythm with a shifted phase was observed for both per and tim mRNA rhythms in the brain. These data suggest that rhythms outside the optic lobe receive control from the optic lobe to different degrees, and that the oscillatory mechanism may be different from that of Drosophila.  相似文献   

2.
Extensive research has been carried out to understand how circadian clocks regulate various physiological processes in organisms. The discovery of clock genes and the molecular clockwork has helped researchers to understand the possible role of these genes in regulating various metabolic processes. In Drosophila melanogaster, many studies have shown that the basic architecture of circadian clocks is multi-oscillatory. In nature, different neuronal subgroups in the brain of D. melanogaster have been demonstrated to control different circadian behavioural rhythms or different aspects of the same circadian rhythm. Among the circadian phenomena that have been studied so far in Drosophila, the egg-laying rhythm is unique, and relatively less explored. Unlike most other circadian rhythms, the egg-laying rhythm is rhythmic under constant light conditions, and the endogenous or free-running period of the rhythm is greater than those of most other rhythms. Although the clock genes and neurons required for the persistence of adult emergence and activity/rest rhythms have been studied extensively, those underlying the circadian egg-laying rhythm still remain largely unknown. In this review, we discuss our current understanding of the circadian egg-laying rhythm in D. melanogaster, and the possible molecular and physiological mechanisms that control the rhythmic output of the egg-laying process.  相似文献   

3.
Significant progress has been made in our understanding of the neurogenetics of circadian clocks in fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster. Several pacemaker neurons and clock genes have now been identified and their roles in the cellular and molecular clockwork established. Some recent findings suggest that the basic architecture of the clock is multi-oscillatory; the clock mechanisms in the ventral lateral neurons (LN(v)s) of the fly brain govern locomotor activity and adult emergence rhythms, while the peripheral oscillators located in antennal cells regulate olfactory rhythm. Among circadian phenomena exhibited by Drosophila, the egg-laying rhythm is unique in many ways: (i) this rhythm persists under constant light (LL), while locomotor activity and adult emergence become arrhythmic, (ii) its circadian periodicity is much longer than 24h, and (iii) while egg-laying is rhythmic under constant darkness, the expression of two core clock genes period (per) and timeless (tim), is non-oscillatory in the ovaries. In this paper, we review our current knowledge of the circadian regulation of egg-laying behavior in Drosophila, and provide some possible explanations for its self-sustained nature. We conclude by discussing the existing limitations in our understanding of the regulatory mechanisms and propose few approaches to address them.  相似文献   

4.
Cryptochrome (CRY) is a blue-light-absorbing protein involved in the photic entrainment of the circadian clock in Drosophila melanogaster. We have investigated the locomotor activity rhythms of flies carrying cryb mutant and revealed that they have two separate circadian oscillators with different responsiveness to light. When kept in constant light conditions, wild-type flies became arrhythmic, while cryb mutant flies exhibited free-running rhythms with two rhythmic components, one with a shorter and the other with a longer free-running period. The rhythm dissociation was dependent on the light intensities: the higher the light intensities, the greater the proportion of animals exhibiting the two oscillations. External photoreceptors including the compound eyes and the ocelli are the likely photoreceptors for the rhythm dissociation, since rhythm dissociation was prevented in so1;cryb and norpAP41;cryb double mutant flies. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that the PERIOD expression rhythms in ventrally located lateral neurons (LNvs) occurred synchronously with the shorter period component, while those in the dorsally located per-expressing neurons showed PER expression most likely related to the longer period component, in addition to that synchronized to the LNvs. These results suggest that the Drosophila locomotor rhythms are driven by two separate per-dependent clocks, responding differentially to constant light.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Finches (Chloris chloris, Fringilla montifringilla) showed clear freerunning circadian rhythms when exposed to constant dim light. Increasing the light intensity by doubling it each day made them become arrhythmic at a certain threshold intensity of illumination, showing continuous locomotor activity. When the light intensity was decreased steadily at the reversed rate, the finches became rhythmic again. 7 out of 8 finches had a clear start in their rhythms, from one day to the next, at light intensities about 4 times higher than the point where they had become arrhythmic. The last finch started its freerunning circadian rhythm gradually, a few days after the light intensity had reached a constant dim illumination (0.2 lux).The results of all birds are taken as proof of the self-excitatory capacity of the circadian system. This means, it characterizes the dynamics of the system that the clock mechanism is continuously in operation, and not only after a passive reaction to external stimuli exceeds any threshold. Simultaneously, the results of all but one bird allow the evaluation of the contribution of proportional and differential effects of light in the control of circadian rhythmicity. A relative change in light intensity by 100% in the course of one day is nearly equivalent to a change of 100% in the absolute intensity of illumination.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Development involves interactions between genetic and environmental influences. Vertebrate mothers are generally the first individuals to encounter and interact with young animals. Thus, their role is primordial during ontogeny. The present study evaluated non‐genomic effects of mothers on the development of rhythms of precocial Japanese quail (Coturnix c. japonica). First, we investigated the influence of mothering on the ontogeny of endogenous rhythms of young. We compared circadian and ultradian rhythms of feeding activity of quail reared with or without adoptive mothers. More brooded than non‐brooded quail presented a circadian and/or an ultradian rhythm. Thus, the presence of the mother during the normal brooding period favors, in the long term, expression of rhythms in the young. Second, we investigated the influence of rhythmic phenotype of the mother on the development of endogenous rhythms of young by comparing quail brooded by circadian‐rhythmic adoptive mothers (R) to quail brooded by circadian‐arrhythmic adoptive mothers (A). More R‐brooded than A‐brooded quail expressed circadian rhythmicity, and circadian rhythm clarities were greater in R‐brooded than A‐brooded quail. Ultradian rhythmicity did not differ between R‐ and A‐brooded quail, nor between R and A adoptive mothers. Thus, the rhythmic phenotypes of quail mothers influence the rhythmic phenotypes of their young. Our results demonstrate that mothers of precocial birds influence epigenetically the ontogeny of endogenous rhythms of the young they raise.  相似文献   

8.
1. A great number of vital processes are rhythmic and the rhythms quite often persist in constant conditions. The best-known rhythms are circadian; much less is known about circalunadian rhythms, and this review was prepared in an attempt to rectify this deficiency. All through the article comparisons are drawn between circalunadian and circacian rhythms. 2. Activity rhythms. (a) The activity patterns of 28 intertidal animals are discussed. All describe a periodicity with a basic component of 24.8 hours, and this approximate period persists in the laboratory in constant light and temperature and in the absence of the tides. The duration of persistence ranges from a few cycles to months, and is a function of the species studied, the conditions imposed, and individual tenacity. (b) In those few cases where relatively long-term observations have been made, there is a trend for the period of the rhythm to become circatidal, or better, circalunadian. (c) The ‘desired’ phase relationship between rhythm and tidal cycle is species-specific. Geographical translocation experiments have shown that the phase is set by the local tides. (d) In some cases the amplitude of the persistent rhythm mimics the semidiurnal inequality of the tides. (e) In about a third of the species discussed, a circadian component has been found combined with the tidal component. Many of the other studies were of such short duration that a low-amplitude circadian component would have gone unnoticed. (f) The tidal rhythm is innate. However, the rhythm is (i) sometimes lacking in organisms living in non-tidal habitats, or (ii) fades after a spell of incarceration in constant conditions. Various treatments — some aperiodic — can induce the expression of the missing tidal rhythm. (g) In the green crab, removal of the eyestalks destroys the activity rhythm. 3. Vertical migration rhythms. (a) A rather surprisingly large number of intertidal animals have been found to undergo migration rhythms between the upper layers of the substratum and its surface. The movements are synchronized with the tides in nature, but most species have either been shown to be diurnal in constant conditions, or in cases where adequate testing has not been done, suspected of being so. (b) In only one species has confirming work shown that the fundamental frequency is truly tidal. This finding is especially important as it shows that tidal rhythms need only the single-cell level of organization for expression. Even at this level there appears to be a dictatorial override by a circadian clock. 4. Colour change. Low-amplitude tidal rhythms in colour change — superimposed on a more dominant circadian change — have been reported to be intrinsic in four species and inducible in a fifth. 5. Oxygen consumption. Tidal rhythms in oxygen consumption have been described for seven invertebrates and one alga; six of the species have superimposed solar-day rhythmic components also. 6. Translocation. A total of five geographical translocation experiments, in which the organisms were maintained in constant conditions throughout, have been tried. Unequivocally in one case, and possibly in a second, the test organisms rephased spontaneously to the times commensurate with local tidal conditions. In two other cases, the pretranslocation phase was retained. The fifth experiment has not been reproducible. 7. Determination of phase. (a) The tidal cycle on the home shoreline sets the phase of the inhabitant's rhythms. Even the location of a crab's burrow on the beach incline can play a determining role. (b) Paradoxically, the periodic wetting by inundation is not an important entraining factor for most intertidal organisms. Instead, the effective portions of the tidal cycle include one or more of the following. (i) Mechanical agitation, especially for animals living in an uprush zone where they are periodically subjected to the pounding surf, (ii) Temperature cycles, though they have not yet been systematically investigated, have very pronounced entraining roles in crabs. (iii) Pressure is probably not a generally important entraining agent for most intertidal organisms, but it is so for the green crab. (c) Light-dark cycles in general, whether daily or tidal in length, have no effect on the entrainment or phase setting of many tidal rhythms. There are two exceptions: (i) a 24-hour light-dark cycle is known to keep a tidal locomotor rhythm (one that becomes circalunadian in constant conditions) at a strict tidal frequency. (ii) In rhythms with both daily and tidal components, when the former is shifted by light stimuli, the latter is affected in a nearly identical manner. 8. Temperature. (a) The role of temperature on tidal rhythms is compared with its role on circadian rhythms. (b) The effects of different constant temperatures have so far been studied on only four tidal rhythms. All studies indicate a lack of any permanent change in period, which is not so with most circadian rhythms; the latter having temperature coefficients around 1.1. In two of the studies the rhythms under test temperatures were followed for less than a day, and a third study cannot be repeated. (c) Short exposure to very cold temperature pulses produced a response that may be interpreted as a temporary stoppage of the clock. Exposure to relatively less-cold pulses appear simply to reset the hands of the clock. The same responses have been demonstrated with circadian rhythms. (d) In the case of green crabs, which had become arrhythmic during prolongued captivity in the laboratory, a tidal rhythm could be reinitiated by a single short cold treatment. The cold pulse also set the phase of the rhythm. (e) A few superficial studies employing temperature steps or pulses have produced results which suggest that a phase-change sensitivity rhythm — just like that found associated with circadian rhythms — may underlie tidal rhythms. Certainly a determined search for this rhythm should be made in the near future. 9. Clock control of rhythms. (a) An argument is constructed claiming that tidal rhythms have a basic period of about 24–8 hours rather than the more expected tidal interval of 12.4 hours. In constant conditions, a circalunadian period is usually displayed. (b) After speculating that a frequency-transforming coupler may function between the clock and the overt rhythm, reasons are given that lead to the further speculation that both circadian and circalunadian rhythms could be generated by a single clock, via specific coupling mechanisms. (c) Two current hypotheses concerning the nature of the clockworks are reviewed and discussed. (d) Suggestions are made for future investigations.  相似文献   

9.
The locomotor activities of individual specimens of Uca subcylindrica (Stimpson) collected from semi-arid, supratidal habitats in south Texas and northeastern Mexico were studied in the laboratory using periodogram analysis. When crabs were placed under constant darkness (DD) or constant illumination (LL), free-running circadian rhythms were observed in the activity recordings. The locomotor activity of strongly rhythmic crabs in LL has an average period length of 24.4 h. Crabs held in DD express motor rhythms with periods of approximately 24.0 h. In LL the most common wave form for activity is unimodal, while under DD it is bimodal. Recordings under natural illumination (NL) revealed that both period length and the time of maximum activity (phasing) varied through the year. During winter months, the crabs are primarily diurnal with peaks in activity occurring between 0900 and 2100 h and possess a circadian rhythm with a 23.9 h period. During summer, crabs were nocturnal with maximal activity between 1300 and 0600 and a circadian period closer to 24.0 h. In these experiments, the rhythmic locomotor activities of U. subcylindrica are best described as “circadian”. This is unusual for a genus known for its expression of circatidal and circalunidian rhythms.  相似文献   

10.
In the cockroach Leucophaea maderae transplantation studies located the circadian pacemaker center, which controls locomotor activity rhythms, to the accessory medulla (AMe), ventromedially to the medulla of the brain’s optic lobes. The AMe is densely innervated via GABA- and manyfold peptide-immunoreactive neurons. They express ultradian action potential oscillations in the gamma frequency range and form phase-locked assemblies of synchronously spiking cells. Peptide application resulted in transient rises of extracellularly recorded activity. It remained unknown whether transient rises in spontaneous electrical activity as a possible indication of peptide release occur in the isolated circadian clock in a rhythmic manner. In extracellular glass electrode recordings of the isolated AMe in constant darkness, which lasted at least 12 h, the distribution of daytime-dependent changes in activity independently of the absolute action potential frequency was examined. Rapid, transient changes in activity preferentially occurred at the mid-subjective night, with a minimum at the middle of the subjective day, hinting the presence of circadian rhythms in the isolated circadian clock. Additionally, ultradian rhythms in activity change that are multiples of a fundamental 2 h period were observed. We hypothesize that circadian rhythms might originate from coupled ultradian oscillations, possibly already at the single cell level.  相似文献   

11.
Age-related division of labor in honeybees is associated with plasticity in circadian rhythms. Young nest bees care for brood around the clock with no circadian rhythms while older foragers have strong circadian rhythms that are used for sun compass navigation and for timing visits to flowers. Since juvenile hormone (JH) is involved in the coordination of physiological and behavioral processes underlying age-related division of labor in honey bees, we tested the hypothesis that JH influences the ontogeny of circadian rhythms and other clock parameters in young worker bees. Treatments with the JH analog methoprene or allatectomy did not influence the onset of rhythmicity, overall locomotor activity, or the free-running period of rhythmic locomotor behavior. There were, however, significant differences in the onset of rhythmicity, overall locomotor activity, and longevity between bees from different source colonies, suggesting that there is significant genetic variation for these traits. Our results suggest that JH does not coordinate all aspects of division of labor in bees and that coordination of task performance with circadian rhythms is probably mediated by other regulatory systems.  相似文献   

12.
In constant conditions (constant darkness [DD], 20°C), the sand beach isopod Cirolana cookii exhibits spontaneous rhythmic swimming activity with an average free-running period of 12.5h. The rhythms are seen as temporal adaptations to a complex intertidal environment. These results support a dual circalunidian clock model for tidal rhythms in which two components of the rhythm have characteristic periods and active phase lengths and are hypothesized to be controlled by separate circalunidian clocks. A quantitative model successfully simulates many of the properties of endogenous swimming rhythms of C. cookii, including free-running behavior, entrainment, and phase-response curves (PRCs). (Chronobiology International 17 (1), 29–41, 2000)  相似文献   

13.
The function of ultradian rhythms is not yet clearly elucidated. In particular, short-term rhythms are expressed during early ontogeny, especially in broods of precocial birds. We investigated the relationship between the clarity of the ultradian rhythm of the activity/rest cycle of a group of young Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) and the level of social synchronisation and spatial cohesion between the birds within that group. The subjects were descended from two lines selected for either very pronounced rhythmic or arrhythmic circadian activity. We found a positive relationship between the clarity of the ultradian rhythm of the activity/rest cycle when birds were young and the clarity of the circadian rhythm of feeding activity when birds were older, but still immature. The temporal organisation of the behaviour of the chicks from these two lines was observed in outdoor aviaries, when they were 4, 8, 12 and 15 days old. The mean ultradian period expressed by groups of 12 chicks was variable, with a minimum of 6 minutes. The ultradian period lengthened regularly as chicks grew older, and reached approximately 40 min on day 15. The clarity of the ultradian rhythmicity of group activity was linked to the level of inter-individual social synchronisation and of spatial cohesion; the more pronounced the ultradian rhythms of a group, the greater the temporal and spatial cohesion of the chicks within the group. Moreover, these characteristics varied with the age of the chicks. Finally, chicks in the less rhythmic groups weighed less. These results stress the adaptive value of this temporal organisation strategy under natural conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The circadian rhythm phenotypes of eight chromosome aberrations with a breakpoint in the region of the per locus (3B1-2) were analyzed. Two duplications and five deficiencies with a 3B1-2 breakpoint produce either a wild-type or an arrhythmic clock phenotype while one translocation with a 3B1-2 breakpoint, T(1;4)JC43, produces locomotor-activity rhythms with either very-long period (31–39 h), rhythms that grade into arrhythmicity, or completely arrhythmic phenotypes. This is a unique phenotype that had not previously been observed for mutants at the per locus. An extensive complementation analysis of 3B1-2 chromosome aberrations and per mutant alleles provided no compelling evidence for genetic complexity at the per locus. This is in contrast to the report of Young and Judd (1978). Analysis of both the locomotor-activity and eclosion phenotypes of 3B1-2 chromosome aberrations did not uncover differences in the genetic control of these two rhythms. The clock phenotypes of 3B1-2 chromosome aberrations, the three per mutant alleles, and per + duplications suggest that mutations at the per locus shorten, lengthen, or eliminate periodicity by respectively increasing, decreasing, or eliminating per activity.  相似文献   

15.
The psi -mutations affected the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity in the early and late strains of Drosophila rajasekari (Joshi, 1999a). The present study was designed to determine the effects of psi -mutations on the oviposition rhythm of the early and late strains. Oviposition rhythms were studied in light-dark cycles of 12 :12 h in which the light intensity of photophase was 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100 or 1000 lux. The oviposition rhythm of wild type was unimodal at or above 10 lux with a peak before lights-off, while it was bimodal at lower light intensities. The early strain was unimodal at all light intensities with a peak after lights-on at or above 10 lux, and around the mid-day at or below 1lux. The late strain was rhythmic at 100 and 1000 lux with a peak after the lights-off, weakly rhythmic at 10 lux and arrhythmic at or below 1 lux. Free running period in constant darkness was shortest in the early and longest in the late strain. Threshold light intensity of constant light to generate arrhythmicity was lowest in the early and highest in the late strain, apparently the photic sensitivity of the clock photoreceptors was differentially altered by these mutations. Thus the psi -mutations for locomotor rhythmicity affected the oviposition rhythm too, suggesting that the same circadian oscillator might be controlling these both rhythms.  相似文献   

16.
The psi -mutations affected the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity in the early and late strains of Drosophila rajasekari (Joshi, 1999a). The present study was designed to determine the effects of psi -mutations on the oviposition rhythm of the early and late strains. Oviposition rhythms were studied in light-dark cycles of 12 :12 h in which the light intensity of photophase was 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100 or 1000 lux. The oviposition rhythm of wild type was unimodal at or above 10 lux with a peak before lights-off, while it was bimodal at lower light intensities. The early strain was unimodal at all light intensities with a peak after lights-on at or above 10 lux, and around the mid-day at or below 1lux. The late strain was rhythmic at 100 and 1000 lux with a peak after the lights-off, weakly rhythmic at 10 lux and arrhythmic at or below 1 lux. Free running period in constant darkness was shortest in the early and longest in the late strain. Threshold light intensity of constant light to generate arrhythmicity was lowest in the early and highest in the late strain, apparently the photic sensitivity of the clock photoreceptors was differentially altered by these mutations. Thus the psi -mutations for locomotor rhythmicity affected the oviposition rhythm too, suggesting that the same circadian oscillator might be controlling these both rhythms.  相似文献   

17.
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19.
The mammalian circadian oscillator is primarily driven by an essential negative feedback loop comprising a positive component, the CLOCK-BMAL1 complex, and a negative component, the PER-CRY complex. Numerous studies suggest that feedback inhibition of CLOCK-BMAL1 is mediated by time-dependent physical interaction with its direct target gene products PER and CRY, suggesting that the ratio between the negative and positive complexes must be important for the molecular oscillator and rhythm generation. We explored this idea by altering expression of clock components in fibroblasts derived from Per2(Luc) and Per mutant mice, a cell system extensively used to study in vivo clock mechanisms. Our data demonstrate that the stoichiometric relationship between clock components is critical for the robustness of circadian rhythms and provide insights into the mechanistic organization of the negative feedback loop. Our findings may explain why certain mutant mice or cells are arrhythmic, whereas others are rhythmic, and suggest that robustness of circadian rhythms can be increased even in wild-type cells by modulating the stoichiometry.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of various temperature cycles on the locomotor activity of the cockroach Leucophaea maderae were investigated. While bilateral ablation of the optic lobes abolished the free-running activity rhythm in constant conditions, rhythmicity was exhibited by lobeless animals placed in temperature cycles. The rhythms were driven by cycles as short as 12 h and as long as 48 h without evidence of frequency division or frequency demultiplication. The phase relationship between activity onset and the temperature cycle was dependent on both the relative durations of the “warm” and “cold” phases of the cycles and on the period of the cycle. Computer simulations indicated that these properties of the rhythm can be explained by proposing that activity is controlled by a damped oscillator, located outside the optic lobes, that can be forced by cycles of temperature.  相似文献   

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