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1.
In previous experiments, we found that rats raised in constant light (LL) manifested a more robust circadian rhythm of motor activity in LL and showed longer phase shifts after a light pulse in constant darkness (DD) than those raised under constant darkness. In addition, we observed that the effects produced by constant light differed depending on the time of postnatal development in which it was given. These results suggest that both sensitivity to light and the functioning of the circadian pacemaker of the rat could be affected by the environmental conditions experienced during postembryonic development. Thus, the present experiment aimed to study whether postnatal exposure to light could also affect the circadian system of the mouse. Three groups of mice were formed: One group was raised under constant darkness during lactation (DD group), the second under constant light (LL group), and the third under light-dark cycles (LD group). After lactation, the three groups were submitted first to constant light of high intensity, then to LD cycles, and finally to constant darkness. In the DD stage, a light pulse was given. Finally, mice were submitted to constant light of low intensity. We observed that the circadian rhythm of the DD group was more disturbed under constant light than the rhythm of the LL group, and that, when light intensity increased, the period of the rhythm of the DD group lengthened more than that of the LL group. No significant differences among the groups were found in the phase shift induced by the light pulse. Therefore, it appears that DD mice are more sensitive to light than their LL counterparts. However, at present there is no evidence to affirm that the light environment experienced by the mouse during postnatal development affects the circadian pacemaker. (Chronobiology International, 18(4), 683-696, 2001)  相似文献   

2.
In previous experiments, we found that rats raised in constant light (LL) manifested a more robust circadian rhythm of motor activity in LL and showed longer phase shifts after a light pulse in constant darkness (DD) than those raised under constant darkness. In addition, we observed that the effects produced by constant light differed depending on the time of postnatal development in which it was given. These results suggest that both sensitivity to light and the functioning of the circadian pacemaker of the rat could be affected by the environmental conditions experienced during postembryonic development. Thus, the present experiment aimed to study whether postnatal exposure to light could also affect the circadian system of the mouse. Three groups of mice were formed: One group was raised under constant darkness during lactation (DD group), the second under constant light (LL group), and the third under light-dark cycles (LD group). After lactation, the three groups were submitted first to constant light of high intensity, then to LD cycles, and finally to constant darkness. In the DD stage, a light pulse was given. Finally, mice were submitted to constant light of low intensity. We observed that the circadian rhythm of the DD group was more disturbed under constant light than the rhythm of the LL group, and that, when light intensity increased, the period of the rhythm of the DD group lengthened more than that of the LL group. No significant differences among the groups were found in the phase shift induced by the light pulse. Therefore, it appears that DD mice are more sensitive to light than their LL counterparts. However, at present there is no evidence to affirm that the light environment experienced by the mouse during postnatal development affects the circadian pacemaker. (Chronobiology International, 18(4), 683–696, 2001)  相似文献   

3.
To examine the role of light in the maturation of the circadian pacemaker, twelve groups of rats were raised in different conditions of exposure to constant bright light (LL) during lactation: both duration and timing of LL were varied. We studied the motor activity rhythm of the rats after weaning, first under LL and then under constant darkness (DD). In DD, two light pulses [at circadian time 15 (CT15) and CT22] were applied to test the response of the pacemaker. Greater exposure to LL days during lactation increased the number of rhythmic animals and the amplitude of their motor activity rhythm in the LL stage and decreased the phase delay due to the light pulse at CT15. The timing of LL during lactation affected these variables too. Because the response of the adult to light depended on both the number and timing of LL days during lactation, the exposure to light at early stages may influence the development of the circadian system by modifying it structurally or functionally.  相似文献   

4.
The circadian system in mammals generates endogenous circadian rhythms and entrains them to external cycles. Here, we examine whether the lighting conditions under which rats are reared affect the properties of the circadian pacemaker. We maintained three groups of rats under constant darkness (DD-rats), constant bright light (LL-rats) or light-dark cycles of 24 hours (LD-rats) during lactation. We then studied motor activity rhythm under constant light of four intensities, and under seven light-dark cycles with periods ranging between 22 and 27 hours. Results show that neither the tau nor the phase angle to the external cycle differed between groups. Differences were found in the amplitude of the circadian rhythm and in the number of rats that became arrhythmic under LL. We conclude that the light received during lactation affects the strength of the circadian pacemaker and its sensitivity to light.  相似文献   

5.
Evidence of a circadian clock mechanism was found in the cave crayfish Procambarus cavernicola. Analysis of motor activity recorded in this species during 12 consecutive days in either free running (constant darkness, DD or constant light, LL) or entrainment conditions (12 h of light alternated with 12 h of darkness, 12 : 12 LD) showed a well recognized circadian rhythm. In this rhythm however, the absence of synchronization by periodical external signals was notorious. The comparison between the motor circadian rhythm in cave crayfish and epigeous crayfish Procambarus clarkii (these last studied during juvenile and adult stages), evidenced strong similitude between the motor circadian rhythm of cave crayfish and juvenile epigeous crayfish.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this work was to investigate the circadian melatonin system in two tropical teleost species characterized by different behavioral habits, Nile tilapia (diurnal) and African catfish (nocturnal). To do so, fish were subjected to either a control photoperiod (12L:12D), continuous light (LL) or darkness (DD), or a 6L:6D photoperiod. Under 12L:12D, plasma melatonin levels were typically low during the photophase and high during the scotophase in both species. Interestingly, in both species, melatonin levels significantly decreased prior to the onset of light, which in catfish reached similar basal levels to those during the day, demonstrating that melatonin production can anticipate photic changes probably through circadian clocks. Further evidence for the existence of such pacemaker activity was obtained when fish were exposed to DD, as a strong circadian melatonin rhythm was maintained. Such an endogenous rhythm was sustained for at least 18 days in Nile tilapia. A similar rhythm was shown in catfish, although DD was only tested for four days. Under LL, the results confirmed the inhibitory effect of light on melatonin synthesis already reported in other species. Finally, when acclimatized to a short photo-cycle (6L:6D), no endogenous melatonin rhythm was observed in tilapia under DD, with melatonin levels remaining high. This could suggest that the circadian clocks cannot entrain to such a short photocycle. Additional research is clearly needed to further characterize the circadian axis in teleost species, identify and localize the circadian clocks, and better understand the environmental entrainment of fish physiology.  相似文献   

7.
The relationship between circadian rhythms in the blood plasma concentrations of melatonin and rhythms in locomotor activity was studied in adult male sheep (Soay rams) exposed to 16-week periods of short days (8 hr of light and 16 hr of darkness; LD 8:16) or long days (LD 16:8) followed by 16-week periods of constant darkness (dim red light; DD) or constant light (LL). Under both LD 8:16 and LD 16:8, there was a clearly defined 24-hr rhythm in plasma concentrations of melatonin, with high levels throughout the dark phase. Periodogram analysis revealed a 24-hr rhythm in locomotor activity under LD 8:16 and LD 16:8. The main bouts of activity occurred during the light phase. A change from LD 8:16 to LD 16:8 resulted in a decrease in the duration of elevated melatonin secretion (melatonin peak) and an increase in the duration of activity corresponding to the changes in the ratio of light to darkness. In all rams, a significant circadian rhythm of activity persisted over the first 2 weeks following transfer from an entraining photoperiod to DD, with a mean period of 23.77 hr. However, the activity rhythms subsequently became disorganized, as did the 24-hr melatonin rhythms. The introduction of a 1-hr light pulse every 24 hr (LD 1:23) for 2 weeks after 8 weeks under DD reinduced a rhythm in both melatonin secretion and activity: the end of the 1-hr light period acted as the dusk signal, producing a normal temporal association of the two rhythms. Under LL, the 24-hr melatonin rhythms were disrupted, though several rams still showed periods of elevated melatonin secretion. Significant activity rhythms were either absent or a weak component occurred with a period of 24 hr. The introduction of a 1-hr dark period every 24 hr for 2 weeks after 8 weeks under LL (LD 23:1) failed to induce or entrain rhythms in either of the parameters. The occurrence of 24-hr activity rhythm in some rams under LL may indicate nonphotoperiodic entrainment signals in our experimental facility. Reproductive responses to the changes in photoperiod were also monitored. After pretreatment with LD 8:16, the rams were sexually active; exposure to LD 16:8, DD, or LL resulted in a decline in all measures of reproductive function. The decline was slower under DD than LD 16:8 or LL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Early lighting conditions have been described to produce long-term effects on circadian behavior, which may also influence the response to agents acting on the circadian system. It has been suggested that melatonin (MEL) may act on the circadian pacemaker and as a scavenger of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Here, we studied the oxidative and behavioral changes caused by prolonged exposure to constant light (LL) in groups of rats that differed in MEL administration and in lighting conditions during suckling. The rats were exposed to either a light–dark cycle (LD) or LL. At 40 days old, rats were treated for 2 weeks with a daily subcutaneous injection of MEL (10?mg/kg body weight) or a vehicle at activity onset. Blood samples were taken before and after treatment, to determine catalase (CAT) activity and nitrite level in plasma. As expected, LL-reared rats showed a more stable motor activity circadian rhythm than LD rats. MEL treatment produced more reactivity in LD- than in LL rats, and was also able to alter the phase of the rhythm in LD rats. There were no significant differences in nitrite levels or CAT activity between the groups, although both variables increased with time. Finally, we also tested depressive signs by means of sucrose consumption, and anhedonia was found in LD males treated with MEL. The results suggest that the lighting conditions in early infancy are important for the long-term functionality of the circadian system, including rhythm manifestation, responses to MEL and mood alterations.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
In the wild type (Canton-S) and period mutant flies of Drosophila melanogaster, we examined the effects of light and temperature on the circadian locomotor rhythm. Under light dark cycles, the wild type and per(S) flies were diurnal at 25 degrees C. However, at 30 degrees C, the daytime activity commonly decreased to form a rather nocturnal pattern, and ultradian rhythms of a 2 approximately 4h period were observed more frequently than at 25 degrees C. The change in activity pattern was more clearly observed in per(0) flies, suggesting that these temperature dependent changes in activity pattern are mainly attributable to the system other than the circadian clock. In a 12h 30 degrees C:12h 25 degrees C temperature cycle (HTLT12:12), per(0) flies were active during the thermophase in constant darkness (DD) but during the cryophase in constant light (LL). The results of experiments with per(0);eya flies suggest that the compound eye is the main source of the photic information for this reversal. Wild type and per(0) flies were synchronized to HTLT12:12 both under LL and DD, while per(S) and per(L) flies were synchronized only in LL. This suggests that the circadian clock is entrainable to the temperature cycle, but the entrainability is reduced in the per(S) and per(L) flies to this particular thermoperiod length, and that temperature cycle forces the clock to move in LL, where the rhythm is believed to be stopped at constant temperature.  相似文献   

11.
The bilaterally paired optic lobe pacemakers of the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus are mutually coupled. In the present study we recorded the neural activity conveyed from the brain toward the optic lobe with a suction electrode to examine the coupling signals. The results demonstrated that the brain efferents to the optic lobe encode the circadian information: Both in constant light (LL) and constant darkness (DD), the neural activity of brain efferents showed a clear circadian rhythm with a nocturnal peak. Since the rhythm survived the severance of the contralateral optic nerve but disappeared when the contralateral optic lobe was removed, it is apparent that the rhythm originates from the contralateral optic lobe. The amplitude of the rhythm was greater in LL than in DD, suggesting that light affects the amplitude of the rhythm. This was confirmed by the fact that the light-induced response was under circadian control, being greater during the subjective night. These data suggest that the bilaterally paired optic lobe pacemakers exchange circadian information as well as light information. The data are also consistent with the results of previous behavioral experiment.Abbreviations DD constant darkness - LD light dark cycle - LL constant light  相似文献   

12.
Mangrove crickets have a circatidal activity rhythm (~12.6 h cycles) with a circadian modulation under constant darkness (DD), whereby activity levels are higher during subjective night low tides than subjective day low tides. This study explored the locomotor activity rhythm of mangrove crickets under constant light (LL). Under LL, the crickets also exhibited a clear circatidal activity rhythm with a free-running period of 12.6 ± 0.26 h (mean ± SD, n = 6), which was not significantly different from that observed under DD. In contrast, activity levels were almost the same between subjective day and night, unlike those under DD, which were greater during subjective night. The loss of circadian modulation under LL may be explained by the suspension of the circadian clock in these conditions. These results strongly suggest that the circatidal activity rhythm is driven by its own clock system, distinct from the circadian clock.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. The larviposition of adult apterous Myzus persicae previously entrained to LD 18:6 showed a marked rhythm both under LD 12:12 (on plants reared in LD 18:6) and under LL (on plants reared in LL). No rhythm was detectable in larviposition by adults reared in LL. Larviposition peaked towards the end of the photophase in LD 12:12. Fresh-weight gain also showed a circadian rhythm with the greatest weight increases during the photophase. Re-entrainment from LD 12:12 to DL 12:12 was not complete after 10 days. It is concluded that the changes in the light cycle did not affect the aphids through the plant.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Abstract.  To reveal circadian characteristics and entrainment mechanisms in the Japanese honeybee Apis cerana japonica , the locomotor-activity rhythm of foragers is investigated under programmed light and temperature conditions. After entrainment to an LD 12 : 12 h photoperiodic regime, free-running rhythms are released in constant dark (DD) or light (LL) conditions with different free-running periods. Under the LD 12 : 12 h regime, activity offset occurs approximately 0.4 h after lights-off transition, assigned to circadian time (Ct) 12.4 h. The phase of activity onset, peak and offset, and activity duration depends on the photoperiodic regimes. The circadian rhythm can be entrained to a 24-h period by exposure to submultiple cycles of LD 6 : 6 h, as if the locomotive rhythm is entrained to LD 18 : 6 h. Phase shifts of delay and advance are observed when perturbing single light pulses are presented during free-running under DD conditions. Temperature compensation of the free-running period is demonstrated under DD and LL conditions. Steady-state entrainment of the locomotor rhythm is achieved with square-wave temperature cycles of 10 °C amplitude, but a 5 °C amplitude fails to entrain.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Cell populations of Paramecium bursaria show mating reactivity in the light period, but not in the dark period, when exposed to a light-dark cycle (LD 12:12). After they are transferred to constant-light (LL) conditions (1,000 lux), they continue to show a circadian rhythm of mating reactivity. The rhythm gradually dampens in LL so that mating reactivity in populations becomes arrhythmic in LL within 2 weeks. We wanted to know whether the arrhythmicity of this population was due to the absence of circadian rhythmicity within each individual cell, or merely due to asynchrony of a population of individually rhythmic cells. Therefore, single cells were isolated randomly from an arrhythmic population that had been in LL for a long time. Then the mating reactivity of these single cells was individually tested every 3 hr for 2 days. Each single cell showed a circadian mating rhythm in LL. This shows that the disappearance of the mating rhythm in cell populations under LL is not caused by disappearance of circadian rhythmicity within individual cells, but is due to desynchronization among cells in a population. When an arrhythmic population in LL is darkened for 9 hr, the mating reactivity rhythm of the cell population reappears. This occurs by resynchronization of the rhythms among individual cells, as can be shown by exposing single cells to pulses of 9 hr of darkness. This dark treatment causes phase shifts of single-cell rhythms, and a phase response curve is obtained for this stimulus. This phase-shifting behavior explains the efficacy of 9-hr dark pulses in restoring the population's rhythm.  相似文献   

18.
The present study was undertaken to investigate the existence of intraocular pressure (IOP) rhythms in athletic thoroughbred horses maintained under a 24 h cycle of light and darkness (LD) or under constant light (LL) or constant dark (DD) conditions. We identified an IOP circadian rhythm that is entrained to the 24 h LD cycle. IOP was low during the dark phase and high during the light phase, with a peak at the end of the light phase (ZT10). The circadian rhythm of IOP persisted in DD (with a peak at CT9.5), demonstrating an endogenous component in IOP rhythm. As previously shown in other mammalian species, horse IOP circadian rhythmicity was abolished in LL. Because tonometry is performed in horses for the diagnosis of ophthalmologic diseases, such as glaucoma or anterior uveitis, the daily variation in IOP must be taken into account in clinical practice to properly time tests and to interpret clinical findings.  相似文献   

19.
Dynamics of rhythmic oscillations in the activity of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AA-NAT, the penultimate and key regulatory enzyme in melatonin biosynthesis) were examined in the retina and pineal gland of turkeys maintained for 7 days in the environment without daily light-dark (LD) changes, namely constant darkness (DD) or continuous light (LL). The two tissues differentially responded to constant environment. In the retina, a circadian AA-NAT activity rhythm disappeared after 5 days of DD, while in the pineal gland it persisted for the whole experiment. No circadian rhythm was observed in the retinas of turkeys exposed to LL, although rhythmic oscillations in both AA-NAT and melatonin content were found in the pineal glands. Both tissues required one or two cycles of the re-installed LD for the full recovery of the high-amplitude AA-NAT rhythm suppressed under constant conditions. It is suggested that the retina of turkey is less able to maintain rhythmicity in constant environment and is more sensitive to changes in the environmental lighting conditions than the pineal gland. Our results indicate that, in contrast to mammals, pineal glands of light-exposed galliformes maintain the limited capacity to rhythmically produce melatonin.  相似文献   

20.
The site (intra- vs. extraocular) of the circadian clock driving an ocular melatonin rhythm in Japanese quail was investigated by alternately covering the left and right eyes of individual quail, otherwise held in constant light (LL), for 12-hr periods. This procedure exposed each eye to a light-dark (LD) 12:12 light cycle 180 degrees (12 hr) out of phase with the LD 12:12 light cycle experienced by the other eye. This protocol entrained the melatonin rhythm in the left eye of quail 180 degrees out of phase with the rhythm expressed in the right eye. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that an independent light-entrainable circadian pacemaker resides in each eye; they are incompatible with the hypothesis that a single (or functionally single) extraocular pacemaker drives the ocular melatonin rhythm in both eyes. However, the results are also compatible with a model in which two independent extraocular circadian pacemakers, each with an exclusive photic input from one eye, drive the ocular melatonin rhythm.  相似文献   

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