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1.
1. A circadian pacemaker is located in the eyes of a variety of marine gastropods, including Aplysia and Bulla. It produces a circadian rhythm in the frequency of spontaneously occurring optic nerve (ON) compound action potentials (CAPs). The circadian pacemaker in Bulla includes a population of 100 retinal pacemaker neurons, that produce the rhythmic CAP output. Intracellular recording from the Bulla pacemaker neurons has yielded new insight into their time-keeping ability. 2. Intracellular injection of Lucifer yellow dye into a single pacemaker neuron results in the spread of dye to several neurons. This dye coupling is presumably mediated by the gap junctions among neurons that are responsible for the synchronous firing of the population of pacemaker neurons and the generation of ON CAPs. 3. The circadian pacemaker in each eye interacts with the paired pacemaker in the contralateral eye. The interaction results in the coordinating firing of CAPs from each eye and in the coordinated phasing of the circadian rhythms of CAP activity generated in each eye. This interaction occurs by reciprocal excitatory chemical synapses. These synaptic receptors occur in the ON as well as in the retinal neuropil and CAP synchrony occurs in the ON as well as in the basal retina. 4. Pacemaker neurons are depolarized by 5-HT and membrane permeable cAMP analogues. The membrane resistance increases during the depolarization suggesting a background potassium current is decreased. 5. The tetrapeptide FMRF-HN2 hyperpolarizes the pacemaker neurons. It reverses the effect of 5-HT and cAMP, suggesting 5-HT and FMRF-NH2 may be acting on the same membrane channel, the S channel.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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3.
The molecular mechanisms of the pacemakers underlying circadian rhythms are not well understood. One molecule that presumably functions in the circadian clock of Drosophila is the product of the period (per) gene, which dramatically affects biological rhythms when mutated. An antibody specific for the per protein labels putative circadian pacemaker neurons and fibers in eyes of two marine gastropods, Aplysia and Bulla. As was found for the Drosophila per protein, there is a daily rhythm in the levels of the per-like antigen in Aplysia eyes. Thus, certain molecular features of the per protein, as well as aspects of the temporal regulation of its expression, may be conserved in circadian pacemakers of widely divergent species.  相似文献   

4.
The eyes of Bulla gouldiana, a marine snail, contain circadian oscillators that are coupled to each other. Obvious candidates for the coupling signals are the optic nerve compound action potentials (CAPs) that express the circadian rhythm and lead to efferent impulses in the contralateral optic nerve. In the present experiments, the role of the CAPs as coupling signals was evaluated. We found that, following desynchronization of the two ocular oscillators by phase-delaying one eye with manganese, subsequent phase shifts in the initially unshifted ocular rhythm only occurred during the time that efferent optic nerve signals were present. In addition, in the absence of ocular desynchrony, phase shifts of the ocular rhythm could still be effected by activation of the efferent pathway. The influence of efferent impulses on identified retinal cells was also evaluated. No effect of efferent signals on receptor layer cells was detected, while it was found that efferent impulses generated depolarizations in basal retinal neurons (BRNs), the putative circadian oscillator cells. Depolarization of the BRNs has been shown previously to be involved in the light entrainment pathway. Depolarization appears to be similarly involved in the coupling pathway, since membrane depolarizations that mimicked the efferent-induced postsynaptic potentials likewise generated phase shifts of the ocular rhythm.  相似文献   

5.
1. The spectral response of the circadian pacemaker of the eye of the mollusk Bulla gouldiana was examined in two ways: by using the latency of the first light-evoked compound action potential (CAP) as an acute photoresponse of the putative pacemaker cells of the eye, the basal retinal neurons (BRNs), and by measuring the effectiveness of monochromatic light pulses at resetting the pacemaker. 2. Through measurements of the spectral sensitivity of the acute response of the BRNs, a photopigment absorbing maximally near 490 nm (lambda max) was described. Action spectra of the acute response following isolation of the BRNs, by surgical removal of the distal photoreceptor layer or the use of low Ca2+ media to block chemical synapses on the BRNs, further suggested that a 490 nm lambda max photopigment is used in generating the acute light response. The spectral sensitivity of eyes adapted to a dim background illumination also agreed with the expected absorption of a 490 lambda max rhodopsin. 3. The effectiveness of monochromatic light pulses at shifting the phase of the circadian rhythm in CAP frequency suggested that the photopigment used in the entrainment of the pacemaker is the opsin based molecule identified through acute response measurements.  相似文献   

6.
The eyes of Bulla, a marine snail, express a circadian rhythm in the frequency of optic nerve compound action potentials (CAPs). The two ocular pacemakers are mutually coupled, and their interaction can be observed in vitro. The evidence for mutual coupling, as demonstrated in the present experiments, was as follows: (1) When intact Bulla were placed into darkness for up to 72 days, the two pacemakers did not desynchronize. (2) The free-running period of the ocular rhythm in the intact system (24.4 hr) was longer than the free-running period of the rhythm recorded from isolated eyes (23.7 hr). (3) When the two ocular pacemakers were experimentally desynchronized in vitro, resynchronization occurred if the pacemakers were allowed to interact for 48 hr. The coupling signals are most likely the CAPs. These impulses are conducted through the central ganglia and emerge as efferent impulses in the opposite optic nerve. Ocular-derived efferent impulse activity affects spontaneous impulse production in the target eye and alters the waveform of the circadian rhythm. The coupling pathway mediating syncrhonization consists of the two optic nerves, the cerebral ganglia, and the cerebral commissure. The demonstration of coupling in vitro provides a new opportunity for studying the cellular mechanisms underlying mutual pacemaker entrainment.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The eyes of the marine snail Bulla gouldiana act as circadian pacemakers. The eyes exhibit a circadian variation in spontaneous optic nerve compound action potential frequency in constant darkness, and are involved in controlling circadian rhythms in behavioral activity expressed by the animal. To initiate an investigation of the molecular aspects of circadian rhythmicity in the Bulla eye and to identify specific molecular markers in the nervous system, we raised monoclonal antibodies (MAb) to the eye and screened them for specific patterns of staining in the eye and brain. Several MAb recognize antigens specific to groups of neurons in the brain, whereas others stain antigens found only in the eye. In addition, some antigens are shared by the eye and the brain. The antigens described here include molecules that mark the lens, retina, neural pathways between the eye and the brain, specific groups of neurons within the central ganglia, and an antigen that is shared by basal retinal neurons (putative ocular circadian pacemaker cells) and glia. These molecular markers may have utility in identifying functionally related groups of neurons, elucidating molecular specializations of the retina, and highlighting pathways used in transmission of information between the retina and the brain.  相似文献   

9.
The marine gastropod Aplysia has a circadian clock in each eye that generates a circadian rhythm of optic nerve activity. The axons of pacemaker neurons carry the rhythmic activity to the brain where it can be recorded from various ganglionic connectives as it is distributed throughout the CNS. We had previously identified an eye-specific 48-kD protein using an antiserum, anti-S, that recognizes the period gene product of Drosophila. We have now obtained two partial amino acid sequences of the 48-kD protein and raised a polyclonal antiserum using a synthetic peptide with the amino acid sequence of one of them. The antiserum recognizes a family of spots of Mr 47–48 kD and Pi 5.9–6.0 on 2D immunoblots of eye proteins. The immunoblot staining intensity does not exhibit a circadian rhythm. Used in immunocytochemistry, the antiserum recognizes fibers in the optic nerve and retinal neuropil, pacemaker neurons, certain photoreceptors, and the photoreceptor rhabdom layer. It stains the optic nerve fibers and optic fiber terminals in the cerebral optic ganglion and recognizes the cerebral optic tracts, putative synaptic exchange areas, and optic tract projections from the cerebral ganglion into various head nerves and interganglionic connectives. The function of the 48-kD protein is not known but it could be involved in the maintenance or regulation of the retinal afferent pathways, including the pacemaker neuron axons, known from previous axonal transport and electrical recording studies to be the circadian output pathway. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The eye of the mollusk Bulla gouldiana contains a pacemaker that generates a circadian rhythm in compound action potentials (CAPs) in the optic nerve. In this paper, we present evidence of a second circadian rhythm in the optic nerve of the eye maintained in darkness at 15 °C. This is a rhythm in the frequency of small (10–40 V) neural impulses that occurs about 12 h out-of-phase with the rhythm in CAPs. Typically, the small-spike frequency is at a minimum within an hour of the peak in CAP frequency and is maximal during the subjective night. Like the CAP rhythm, the phase of the small-spike rhythm is determined by the prior light/dark cycle. A rebound in small-spike activity following the end of a light pulse and the presence of photoinhibited impulses in surgically reduced eyes suggests that the cells that generate the small-spikes may be photoreceptors that are inhibited by light. In addition, by using isolated nervous system preparations, we have found that smallspikes occur in the two optic nerves in a one-for-one relationship immediately following a light-to-dark transition. This inter-eye communication may be involved in the coupling of the ocular pacemakers.Abbreviations ASW artificial sea water - BRN basal retinal neuron - CAP compound action potential  相似文献   

11.
Substantial progress has been made in unraveling the organization of the circadian system of Aplysia californica. There are at least three circadian pacemakers in Aplysia. One has been localized in each eye and a third lies outside the eyes. Removal of the eyes disrupts the free-running locomotor activity rhythm; however, an extraocular oscillator can mediate a free-running rhythm in some eyeless animals. Although photoreceptors sufficient for entrainment of the ocular oscillator have been localized in the retina, photoreceptors outside the eyes are capable of "driving" a diurnal rhythm of locomotor activity and may also influence entrainment of ocular pacemakers. Finally, attention has been focused on the optic nerve as a coupling pathway between various parts of the system. The evidence suggests that information transmitted in the optic nerves is involved in entrainment of the ocular pacemaker by light, and in ocular control of the locomotor activity rhythm.  相似文献   

12.
13.
TheBulla ocular circadian pacemaker   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In an effort to understand the cellular basis of entrainment of circadian oscillators we have studied the role of membrane potential changes in the neurons which comprise the ocular circadian pacemaker of Bulla gouldiana in mediating phase shifts of the ocular circadian rhythm. We report that: 1. Intracellular recording was used to measure directly the effects of the phase shifting agents light, serotonin, and 8-bromo-cAMP on the membrane potential of the basal retinal neurons. We found that light pulses evoke a transient depolarization followed by a smaller sustained depolarization. Application of serotonin produced a biphasic response; a transient depolarization followed by a sustained hyperpolarization. Application of a membrane permeable analog of the intracellular second messenger cAMP, 8-bromo-cAMP, elicited sustained hyperpolarization, and occasionally a weak phasic depolarization. 2. Changing the membrane potential of the basal retinal neurons directly and selectively with intracellularly injected current phase shifts the ocular circadian rhythm. Both depolarizing and hyperpolarizing current can shift the phase of the circadian oscillator. Depolarizing current mimics the phase shifting action of light, while hyperpolarizing current produces phase shifts which are transposed approximately 180 degrees in circadian time to depolarization. 3. Altering BRN membrane potential with ionic treatments, depolarizing with elevated K+ seawater or hyperpolarizing with lowered Na+ seawater, produces phase shifts similar to current injection. 4. The light-induced depolarization of the basal retinal neurons is necessary for phase shifts by light. Suppressing the light-induced depolarization with injected current inhibits light-induced phase shifts. 5. The ability of membrane potential changes to shift oscillator phase is dependent on extracellular calcium. Reducing extracellular free Ca++ from 10 mM to 1.3 X 10(-7) M inhibits light-induced phase shifts without blocking the photic response of the BRNs. The results indicate that changes in the membrane potential of the pacemaker neurons play a critical role in phase shifting the circadian rhythm, and imply that a voltage-dependent and calcium-dependent process, possibly Ca++ influx, shifts oscillator phase in response to light.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The eye of the marine mollusk Aplysia californica contains a photo-entrainable circadian pacemaker that drives an overt circadian rhythm of spontaneous compound action potentials in the optic nerve. Serotonin is known to influence the phase of this ocular rhythm. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether potassium channels are involved in effects on the ocular circadian rhythm. Our experimental approach was to study the effect of the potassium channel antagonist barium on serotonin-induced phase shifts of this rhythm. The application of barium was found to block serotonininduced phase shifts whereas barium alone did not cause significant phase shifts. The effects of barium were found to be dose dependent. In addition, barium blocked forskolin-induced phase advances but did not interfere with serotonin-induced increases in cAMP content. Finally, barium antagonized serotonin-induced suppression of compound action potential activity. These results are consistent with a model in which the application of serotonin phase shifts the ocular pacemaker by causing a membrane hyperpolarization which is mediated by a cAMP-dependent potassium conductance.Abbreviations ASW artificial seawater - Ba+ + barium - CAP compound action potential - CT circadian time - 5-HT serotonin - TEA tetraethylammonium  相似文献   

15.
Summary The eye of the marine mollusk Aplysia californica contains a photo-entrainable circadian pacemaker that drives an overt circadian rhythm of spontaneous compound action potentials in the optic nerve. Both light and serotonin are known to influence the phase of this ocular rhythm. The current study evaluated the effect of FMRFamide on both light and serotonin induced phase shifts of this rhythm. The application of FMRFamide was found to block serotonin induced phase shifts but, by itself, FMRFamide did not cause significant phase shifts. Furthermore, the effects of FMRFamide on light-induced phase shifts appeared to be phase dependent (i.e., the application of FMRFamide inhibited light-induced phase delays but actually enhanced the magnitude of phase advances). As in Aplysia, the eye of Bulla gouldiana also contains a circadian pacemaker. In Bulla, FMRFamide prevented light-induced phase advances and delays. Although FMRFamide alone generated phase dependent phase shifts, it did not cause phase shifts at the phases where it blocked the effects of light. These data demonstrate that FMRFamide can have pronounced modulatory effects on phase shifting inputs to the ocular pacemakers of both Aplysia and Bulla.Abbreviations ASW artificial seawater - CAP compound action potential - CT circadian time - 5-HT serotonin  相似文献   

16.
Each eye of Aplysia contains a circadian clock that produces a robust rhythm of optic nerve impulse activity. To isolate the pacemaker neurons and photoreceptors of the eye and determine their participation in the circadian clock and its generation of rhythmic autoactivity, the retina was dissociated and its cells were placed in primary cell culture. The isolated neurons and photoreceptors survived and vigorously extended neurites tipped with growth cones. Many of the photoreceptors previously described from histological sections of the intact retina were identified in culture, including the large R-type photoreceptor, which gave robust photoresponses, and the smaller tufted, whorled, and flared photoreceptors. The pacemaker neurons responsible for the rhythmic impulse activity generated by the eye were identified by their distinctive monopolar morphology and recordings were made of their activity. Isolated pacemaker neurons produced spontaneous action potentials in darkness, and pacemaker neurons attached to fragments of retina or in an isolated cluster interacted to produce robust spontaneous activity. This study establishes that isolated retinal pacemaker neurons retain their innate autoactivity and ability to produce action potentials in culture and that clusters of coupled pacemaker neurons are capable of generating robust autoactivity comparable to pacemaker neuron rhythmic activity recorded in the intact retina, which was previously shown to correspond to 1:1 with the optic nerve compound action potential activity. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The lateral eyes of the horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) show a daily rhythm in visual sensitivity that is mediated by efferent nerve signals from a circadian clock in the crab's brain. How these signals communicate circadian messages is not known for this or other animals. Here the authors describe in quantitative detail the spike firing pattern of clock output neurons in living horseshoe crabs and discuss its possible significance to clock organization and function. Efferent fiber spike trains were recorded extracellularly for several hours to days, and in some cases, the electroretinogram was simultaneously acquired to monitor eye sensitivity. Statistical features of single- and multifiber recordings were characterized via interval distribution, serial correlation, and power spectral analysis. The authors report that efferent feedback to the eyes has several scales of temporal structure, consisting of multicellular bursts of spikes that group into clusters and packets of clusters that repeat throughout the night and disappear during the day. Except near dusk and dawn, the bursts occur every 1 to 2 sec in clusters of 10 to 30 bursts separated by a minute or two of silence. Within a burst, each output neuron typically fires a single spike with a preferred order, and intervals between bursts and clusters are positively correlated in length. The authors also report that efferent activity is strongly modulated by light at night and that just a brief flash has lasting impact on clock output. The multilayered firing pattern is likely important for driving circadian rhythms in the eye and other target organs.  相似文献   

18.
Effects of capsaicin (CAP) on membrane properties and action potentials (AP) were studied (30-300 microM, at 22 degrees C, pH 7.4) in Helix and Aplysia neurons. CAP (100-300 microM) depolarized the cell membrane and increased the slope resistance. The neuronal firing increased and/or the spike threshold decreased. CAP differentially affected the APs generated in A- and B-cells in Helix or S- and F-cells in Aplysia. Plateau-like prolongation of the APs with a concomitant increase of the hump duration was observed in A-cells, while a significant prolongation of the spike duration was at 90% repolarization time in B-cells. The electrophysiological changes proved to be similar when CAP acted in homologous Helix and Aplysia neurons, but were less pronounced in the latter animal. CAP decreased the rate of rise and the rate of fall of the APs and shortened the action potential duration (APD) in Na-free (TEA) solution. CAP-induced events were dose-dependent and reversible.  相似文献   

19.
We have used intracellular recording to directly measure the effects of three experimental agents, light, elevated potassium seawater, and lowered sodium seawater on the membrane potential of the putative circadian pacemaker neurons of the Bulla eye. These agents were subsequently tested for effects on the free running period of the circadian pacemaker. We report that: 1. When applied to the eye, light and elevated potassium seawater depolarized the putative pacemaker neurons, while lowered sodium seawater hyperpolarized them. The membrane potential changes induced by these agents are sustained for at least one hour, suggesting that they produce persistent changes in the average membrane potential of the putative pacemaker neurons. 2. The amplitude of the membrane potential response to the depolarizing agents varies with the phase of the circadian cycle. Depolarizations induced by light and elevated potassium seawater are twice as large during the subjective night than they are during the subjective day. No significant difference was found in the response to lowered sodium seawater at different phases. 3. Continuous application of each of these agents caused a lengthening of the free running period of the Bulla eye. Constant light increased the period by 0.9 h, while the other depolarizing treatment (elevated potassium seawater) increased the free running period by 0.6 h. Both treatments increased the mean peak impulse frequency of treated eyes. The hyperpolarizing treatment also increased the period of the ocular pacemaker (+0.8 h), but had little effect on peak impulse frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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