首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The endogenous circadian pacemaker of mammals is synchronized to the environmental day by the ambient cycle of relative light and dark. The present studies assessed the actions of light in a novel circadian entrainment paradigm where activity rhythms are bifurcated following exposure to a 24-h light:dark:light:dark (LDLD) cycle. Bifurcated entrainment under LDLD reflects the temporal dissociation of component oscillators that comprise the circadian system and is facilitated when daily scotophases are dimly lit rather than completely dark. Although bifurcation can be stably maintained in LDLD, it is quickly reversed under constant conditions. Here the authors examine whether dim scotophase illumination acts to maintain bifurcated entrainment under LDLD through potential interactions with the parametric actions of bright light during the two daily photophases. In three experiments, wheel-running rhythms of Syrian hamsters were bifurcated under LDLD with dimly lit scotophases, and after several weeks, dim scotophase illumination was either retained or extinguished. Additionally, “full” and “skeleton” photophases were employed under LDLD cycles with dimly lit or completely dark scotophases to distinguish parametric from nonparametric effects of bright light. Rhythm bifurcation was more stable in full versus skeleton LDLD cycles. Dim light facilitated the maintenance of bifurcated entrainment under full LDLD cycles but did not prevent the loss of rhythm bifurcation in skeleton LDLD cycles. These studies indicate that parametric actions of bright light maintain the bifurcated entrainment state; that dim scotophase illumination increases the stability of the bifurcated state; and that dim light interacts with the parametric effects of bright light to increase the stability of rhythm bifurcation under full LDLD cycles. A further understanding of the novel actions of dim light may lead to new strategies for understanding, preventing, and treating chronobiological disturbances. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

2.
Conventional wisdom holds that the circadian pacemaker of rodents and humans is minimally responsive to light of the intensity provided by dim moonlight and starlight. However, dim illumination (<0.005 lux) provided during the daily dark periods markedly alters entrainment in hamsters. Under dimly lit scotophases, compared to completely dark ones phases, the upper range of entrainment is increased by ~4 h, and re‐entrainment is accelerated following transfer from long to short day lengths. Moreover, the incidence of bimodal entrainment to 24 h light:dark:light:dark cycles is increased fourfold. Notably, the nocturnal illumination inducing these pronounced effects is equivalent in photic energy to that of a 2 sec, 100 lux light pulse. These effects may be parsimoniously interpreted as an action of dim light on the phase relations between multiple oscillators comprising the circadian pacemaker. An action of dim light distinct from that underlying bright‐light phase‐resetting may promote more effective entrainment. Together, the present results refute the view that scotopic illumination is environmental “noise” and indicate that clock function is conspicuously altered by nighttime illumination like that experienced under dim moonlight and starlight. We interpret our results as evidence for a novel action of dim light on the coupling of multiple circadian oscillators.  相似文献   

3.
Conventional wisdom holds that the circadian pacemaker of rodents and humans is minimally responsive to light of the intensity provided by dim moonlight and starlight. However, dim illumination (<0.005 lux) provided during the daily dark periods markedly alters entrainment in hamsters. Under dimly lit scotophases, compared to completely dark ones phases, the upper range of entrainment is increased by approximately 4 h, and re-entrainment is accelerated following transfer from long to short day lengths. Moreover, the incidence of bimodal entrainment to 24 h light:dark:light:dark cycles is increased fourfold. Notably, the nocturnal illumination inducing these pronounced effects is equivalent in photic energy to that of a 2 sec, 100 lux light pulse. These effects may be parsimoniously interpreted as an action of dim light on the phase relations between multiple oscillators comprising the circadian pacemaker. An action of dim light distinct from that underlying bright-light phase-resetting may promote more effective entrainment. Together, the present results refute the view that scotopic illumination is environmental "noise" and indicate that clock function is conspicuously altered by nighttime illumination like that experienced under dim moonlight and starlight. We interpret our results as evidence for a novel action of dim light on the coupling of multiple circadian oscillators.  相似文献   

4.
The multiple oscillatory basis of the mammalian circadian pacemaker is adduced by, among other phenomena, the occurrence of split locomotor activity rhythms in rodents after prolonged exposure to constant light. More recently, split rhythms entrained to a 24h light:dark:light:dark cycle have been documented following scheduled access of hamsters to a novel running wheel or by photoperiod manipulations alone. Because the incidence of constant light-induced splitting depends on light intensity, the role of this variable was assessed in this new splitting paradigm. Male Syrian hamsters, entrained to a 14h light:10h dark cycle, were transferred to individual running wheel cages 7h after light onset. Transfer coincided with the beginning of the scotophase of a new photocycle alternating between 5h of relative dark and 7h of light. For four weeks bright photophases (approximately 350 lux) were alternated with either dim (< 0.1 lux) or completely dark (0 lux) scotophases. An additional group received moderate intensity photophases (approximately 45 lux) paired with dim scotophase illumination. For an additional four weeks, all hamsters were exposed to the same bright:dim light:dark cycle. Dim light in the scotophase significantly increased the incidence of split activity rhythms relative to that observed with completely dark scotophases. Overall wheel-running rates and activity induced by a cage change were also increased in dim light-exposed animals. Group differences largely disappeared four weeks later when hamsters previously maintained in completely dark scotophases were exposed to dim scotophases. Photophase light intensity did not affect the overall incidence of splitting, but influenced the timing of activity in the afternoon scotophase. The effects of dim illumination may be mediated in part via enhanced locomotor responses to transfer to a new cage or by changes in coupling interactions between component oscillators.  相似文献   

5.
The multiple oscillatory basis of the mammalian circadian pacemaker is adduced by, among other phenomena, the occurrence of split locomotor activity rhythms in rodents after prolonged exposure to constant light. More recently, split rhythms entrained to a 24h light:dark:light:dark cycle have been documented following scheduled access of hamsters to a novel running wheel or by photoperiod manipulations alone. Because the incidence of constant light-induced splitting depends on light intensity, the role of this variable was assessed in this new splitting paradigm. Male Syrian hamsters, entrained to a 14h light:10h dark cycle, were transferred to individual running wheel cages 7h after light onset. Transfer coincided with the beginning of the scotophase of a new photocycle alternating between 5h of relative dark and 7h of light. For four weeks bright photophases (~350 lux) were alternated with either dim (<0.1 lux) or completely dark (0 lux) scotophases. An additional group received moderate intensity photophases (~45 lux) paired with dim scotophase illumination. For an additional four weeks, all hamsters were exposed to the same bright:dim light:dark cycle. Dim light in the scotophase significantly increased the incidence of split activity rhythms relative to that observed with completely dark scotophases. Overall wheel-running rates and activity induced by a cage change were also increased in dim light-exposed animals. Group differences largely disappeared four weeks later when hamsters previously maintained in completely dark scotophases were exposed to dim scotophases. Photophase light intensity did not affect the overall incidence of splitting, but influenced the timing of activity in the afternoon scotophase. The effects of dim illumination may be mediated in part via enhanced locomotor responses to transfer to a new cage or by changes in coupling interactions between component oscillators.  相似文献   

6.
Recent work with exotic 24-h light:dark:light:dark (LDLD) cycles indicates surprising flexibility in the entrainment patterns of Syrian hamsters. Following exposure to an LDLD cycle, hamsters may adopt a form of rhythm splitting in which markers of subjective night (e.g., activity, melatonin) are expressed in each of the twice daily scotophases. This pattern contrasts markedly with that of conventionally entrained hamsters in which markers of subjective night are expressed once daily in only 1 of the 2 dark periods. The "split" entrainment pattern was examined further here in Syrian and Siberian hamsters and in mice exposed to LDLD 7:5:7:5, a condition that reliably induces split activity rhythms in all 3 species. The phase angle of entrainment and activity duration were generally similar comparing the 2 daily activity bouts in each species. The stability of this split entrainment state was assessed by deletions of photophases on individual days, by exposure to skeleton photoperiods, and by transfer to constant darkness. As in Syrian hamsters, the one-time substitution of darkness for one 7-h photophase did not grossly alter activity patterns of Siberian hamsters but acutely disrupted the split rhythms of mice. Skeleton light pulses of progressively shorter duration did not significantly alter split entrainment patterns of either Syrian or Siberian hamsters. Both species continued to exhibit stable entrainment with activity expressed in alternate scotophases of an LD 1:5 cycle presented 4 times daily. In contrast, the split activity rhythms of mice were not maintained under skeleton pulses. In constant darkness, rhythms of Siberian hamsters remained distinctly split for a minimum of 2 cycles. Split entrainment to these novel LDLD and 4-pulse skeleton lighting regimes demonstrates a marked degree of plasticity common to the circadian systems of several rodent species and identifies novel entrainment patterns that may be reliably elicited with simple environmental manipulations. Inter- and intraspecific differences in the stability of split activity rhythms likely reflect differences in coupling interactions between the component circadian oscillators, which, adopting separate phase relations to these novel LD cycles, yield a split entrainment pattern.  相似文献   

7.
In mammals, light entrains endogenous circadian pacemakers by inducing daily phase shifts via a photoreceptor mechanism recently discovered in retinal ganglion cells. Light that is comparable in intensity to moonlight is generally ineffective at inducing phase shifts or suppressing melatonin secretion, which has prompted the view that circadian photic sensitivity has been titrated so that the central pacemaker is unaffected by natural nighttime illumination. However, the authors have shown in several different entrainment paradigms that completely dark nights are not functionally equivalent to dimly lit nights, even when nighttime illumination is below putative thresholds for the circadian visual system. The present studies extend these findings. Dim illumination is shown here to be neither a strong zeitgeber, consistent with published fluence response curves, nor a potentiator of other zeitgebers. Nevertheless, dim light markedly alters the behavior of the free-running circadian pacemaker. Syrian hamsters were released from entrained conditions into constant darkness or dim narrowband green illumination (~0.01 lx, 1.3 x 10(-9) W/cm(2), peak lambda = 560 nm). Relative to complete darkness, constant dim light lengthened the period by ~0.3 h and altered the waveform of circadian rhythmicity. Among animals transferred from long day lengths (14 L:10 D) into constant conditions, dim illumination increased the duration of the active phase (alpha) by ~3 h relative to complete darkness. Short day entrainment (8 L:16 D) produced initially long alpha that increased further under constant dim light but decreased under complete darkness. In contrast, dim light pulses 2 h or longer produced effects on circadian phase and melatonin secretion that were small in magnitude. Furthermore, the amplitude of phase resetting to bright light and nonphotic stimuli was similar against dimly lit and dark backgrounds, indicating that the former does not directly amplify circadian inputs. Dim illumination markedly alters circadian waveform through effects on alpha, suggesting that dim light influences the coupling between oscillators theorized to program the beginning and end of subjective night. Physiological mechanisms responsible for conveying dim light stimuli to the pacemaker and implications for chronotherapeutics warrant further study.  相似文献   

8.
Photic entrainment of animals in the field is basically attributed to their exposure to the dimly lit nights flanked by the dawn and dusk twilight transitions. This implicates the functional significance of the dimly lit nights as that of the twilight transitions. Recently, the authors have demonstrated that the dimly lit night at 0.0006 lux altered the attributes of the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity of Drosophila jambulina. The present study examined whether the durations of such dimly lit nights affect the entrainment and free-running rhythmicity of D. jambulina. Flies were subjected for 10 days to two types of 24-h lighting regimes in which the photophase (L) was at 10 lux for all flies but the scotophase, which varied in duration from 9 to 15 h, was either at 0 lux (D phase) for control flies or 0.0006 lux (the artificial starlight or S phase) for experimental flies. Thereafter, they were transferred to constant darkness (DD) to compare the after-effects of the dimly lit nights on the period (τ) of free-running rhythm in DD with that of the completely dark nights. Control flies were entrained by all LD cycles, but the experimental flies were entrained only by five LS cycles in which the duration of the S phases ranged from 10 to 14 h. The two LS cycles with very short (9 h) and long (15 h) S phases rendered the flies completely arrhythmic. Control flies started activity shortly before lights-on and continued well after lights-off. The experimental flies, however, commenced activity several hours prior to lights-on but ended activity abruptly at lights-off as the result of a negative masking effect of nocturnal illumination. Length of the midday rest was considerably shorter in the control than in the experimental flies in each lighting regime. The active phase in the control flies was predictably shortened; nonetheless, it was invariable in the experimental flies as the nights lengthened. Transfer from lighting regimes to DD initiated robust free-running rhythmicity in all flies including the arrhythmic ones subjected to LS cycles with 9 and 15 h of scotophases. The τ was profoundly affected by the nocturnal irradiance of the prior entraining lighting regime, as it was always shorter in the experimental than in the control flies. Thus, these results indisputably demonstrate the changes in fundamental properties of the circadian pacemaker of D. jambulina were solely attributed to the extremely dim nocturnal irradiance. This strain of D. jambulina is entrained essentially by the dimly lit natural nights, since it is never exposed to the prevailing photic cues such as the twilight transitions or bright photoperiod, owing to the dense vegetation of its habitat.  相似文献   

9.
Photic entrainment of animals in the field is basically attributed to their exposure to the dimly lit nights flanked by the dawn and dusk twilight transitions. This implicates the functional significance of the dimly lit nights as that of the twilight transitions. Recently, the authors have demonstrated that the dimly lit night at 0.0006 lux altered the attributes of the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity of Drosophila jambulina. The present study examined whether the durations of such dimly lit nights affect the entrainment and free-running rhythmicity of D. jambulina. Flies were subjected for 10 days to two types of 24-h lighting regimes in which the photophase (L) was at 10 lux for all flies but the scotophase, which varied in duration from 9 to 15?h, was either at 0 lux (D phase) for control flies or 0.0006 lux (the artificial starlight or S phase) for experimental flies. Thereafter, they were transferred to constant darkness (DD) to compare the after-effects of the dimly lit nights on the period (τ) of free-running rhythm in DD with that of the completely dark nights. Control flies were entrained by all LD cycles, but the experimental flies were entrained only by five LS cycles in which the duration of the S phases ranged from 10 to 14?h. The two LS cycles with very short (9?h) and long (15?h) S phases rendered the flies completely arrhythmic. Control flies started activity shortly before lights-on and continued well after lights-off. The experimental flies, however, commenced activity several hours prior to lights-on but ended activity abruptly at lights-off as the result of a negative masking effect of nocturnal illumination. Length of the midday rest was considerably shorter in the control than in the experimental flies in each lighting regime. The active phase in the control flies was predictably shortened; nonetheless, it was invariable in the experimental flies as the nights lengthened. Transfer from lighting regimes to DD initiated robust free-running rhythmicity in all flies including the arrhythmic ones subjected to LS cycles with 9 and 15?h of scotophases. The τ was profoundly affected by the nocturnal irradiance of the prior entraining lighting regime, as it was always shorter in the experimental than in the control flies. Thus, these results indisputably demonstrate the changes in fundamental properties of the circadian pacemaker of D. jambulina were solely attributed to the extremely dim nocturnal irradiance. This strain of D. jambulina is entrained essentially by the dimly lit natural nights, since it is never exposed to the prevailing photic cues such as the twilight transitions or bright photoperiod, owing to the dense vegetation of its habitat. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

10.
《Chronobiology international》2013,30(9):1206-1215
The daily pattern of blood-borne melatonin varies seasonally under the control of a multi-oscillator circadian pacemaker. Here we examine patterns of melatonin secretion and locomotor activity in Siberian and Syrian hamsters entrained to bimodal LDLD8:4:8:4 and LD20:4 lighting schedules that facilitate novel temporal arrangements of component circadian oscillators. Under LDLD, both species robustly bifurcated wheel-running activity in distinct day scotophase (DS) and night scotophase (NS) bouts. Siberian hamsters displayed significant melatonin increases during each scotophase in LDLD, and in the single daily scotophase of LD20:4. The bimodal melatonin secretion pattern persisted in acutely extended 16 h scotophases. Syrian hamsters, in contrast, showed no significant increases in plasma melatonin during either scotophase of LDLD8:4:8:4 or in LD20:4. In this species, detectable levels were observed only when the DS of LDLD was acutely extended to yield 16 h of darkness. Established species differences in the phase lag of nocturnal melatonin secretion relative to activity onset may underlie the above contrast: In non-bifurcated entrainment to 24 h LD cycles, Siberian hamsters show increased melatonin secretion within ~2 h after activity onset, whereas in Syrian hamsters, detectable melatonin secretion phase lags activity onset and the L/D transition by at least 4?h. The present results provide new evidence indicating multi-oscillator regulation of the waveform of melatonin secretion, specifically, the circadian control of the onset, offset and duration of nocturnal secretion.  相似文献   

11.
The circadian pacemaker of mammals comprises multiple oscillators that may adopt different phase relationships to determine properties of the coupled system. The effect of nocturnal illumination comparable to dim moonlight was assessed in male Siberian hamsters exposed to two re-entrainment paradigms believed to require changes in the phase relationship of underlying component oscillators. In experiment 1, hamsters were exposed to a 24-h light-dark-light-dark cycle previously shown to split circadian rhythms into two components such that activity is divided between the two daily dark periods. Hamsters exposed to dim illumination (<0.020 lx) during each scotophase were more likely to exhibit split rhythms compared to hamsters exposed to completely dark scotophases. In experiment 2, hamsters were transferred to winter photoperiods (10 h light, 14 h dark) from two different longer daylengths (14 h or 18 h light daily) in the presence or absence of dim nighttime lighting. Dim nocturnal illumination markedly accelerated adoption of the winter phenotype as reflected in the expansion of activity duration, gonadal regression and weight loss. The two experiments demonstrate substantial efficacy of light intensities generally viewed as below the threshold of circadian systems. Light may act on oscillator coupling through rod-dependent mechanisms.Abbreviations activity duration - DD constant dark or dim - E evening oscillator - ETV estimated testis volume - LDLD light-dark-light-dark cycle - LED light emitting diode - M morning oscillator - SCN suprachiasmatic nuclei - free-running period  相似文献   

12.
The interactions (i.e., coupling) between multiple oscillators of a circadian system determine basic properties of the integrated pacemaker. Unfortunately, there are few experimental models to investigate the putative interactions of functionally defined oscillators comprising the mammalian circadian pacemaker. Here the authors induce in hamsters a novel circadian entrainment pattern that is characterized by the daily expression of robust wheel-running activity in each scotophase of a 24-h light:dark:light:dark cycle. The daily activity bouts are mediated by 2 circadian oscillators, here designated "daytime" and "nighttime," that have been temporally dissociated under this light regime. To assess the phase dependence of interactions between oscillatory components, the phase relationship of the 2 daily scotophases was manipulated over a 4-h range, and the timing of activity of the daytime and nighttime components under entrained and probe conditions was examined. The average phase angle of entrainment and the day-to-day variability of activity onset of each activity component depended on the phase relationship of the respective scotophases and not on whether the component occurred in the daytime or the nighttime. Short-term denial of wheel access subsequently influenced amount and duration of wheel running but not timing of its onset, suggesting that only the former measures depend on a homeostatic mechanism sensitive to the time elapsed since prior intense running. Replacement of individual photophases with darkness revealed phase attraction between oscillators that was not dependent on the phase relationship of component oscillators but differed for daytime versus nighttime activity components. Entrainment patterns shown here cannot be accounted for by only nonparametric actions of light. Instead, the phase-dependent interactions of oscillators strongly influence entrainment properties, whereas intrinsic functional differences in dissociated oscillators apparently influence their attraction in darkness. This model system may be ideal for identifying genomic and physiological factors that mediate these interactions and thus contribute importantly to system properties of the mammalian circadian clock.  相似文献   

13.
Endogenously generated circadian rhythms are synchronized with the environment through phase-resetting actions of light. Starlight and dim moonlight are of insufficient intensity to reset the phase of the clock directly, but recent studies have indicated that dim nocturnal illumination may otherwise substantially alter entrainment to bright lighting regimes. In this article, the authors demonstrate that, compared to total darkness, dim illumination at night (< 0.010 lux) alters the entrainment of male Syrian hamsters to bright-light T cycles, gradually increasing in cycle length (T) from 24 h to 30 h. Only 1 of 18 hamsters exposed to complete darkness at night entrained to cycles of T > 26 h. In the presence of dim nocturnal illumination, however, a majority of hamsters entrained to Ts of 28 h or longer. The presence or absence of a running wheel had only minor effects on entrainment to lengthening light cycles. The results further establish the potent effects of scotopic illumination on circadian entrainment and suggest that naturalistic ambient lighting at night may enhance the plasticity of the circadian pacemaker.  相似文献   

14.
The authors have studied the activity rhythm of Syrian hamsters exposed to square LD cycles with a 22-h period (T22) with the aim of testing the effects of the previous history on the rhythmic pattern. To do so, sequential changes of different lighting environments were established, followed by the same LD condition. Also, the protocol included T22 cycles with varying lighting contrasts to test the extent to which a computational model predicts experimental outcomes. At the beginning of the experiment, exposure to T22 with 300 lux and dim red light occurring respectively at photophase and scotophase (LD300/dim red) mainly generated relative coordination. Subsequent transfer to cycles with approximately 0.1-lux dim light during the scotophase (LD300/0.1) promoted entrainment to T22. However, a further reduction in light intensity to 10 lux during the photophase (LD10/0.1) generated weak and unstable T22 rhythms. When, after that, animals were transferred again to the initial LD300/dim red cycles, the amplitude of the rhythm still remained very low, and the phases were very unstable. Exposure to constant darkness partially restored the activity rhythm, and when, afterwards, the animals were submitted again to LD300/dim red cycles, a robust T22 rhythm appeared. The results demonstrate history-dependent changes in the hamster circadian system because the locomotor activity pattern under the same T22 cycle can show relative coordination or unstable or robust entrainment depending on the prior lighting condition. This suggests that the circadian system responds to environmental stimuli depending on its previous history. Moreover, computer simulations allow the authors to predict entrainment under LD300/0.1 cycles and indicate that most of the patterns observed in the animals due to the light in the scotophase can be explained by different degrees of coupling among the oscillators of the circadian system.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Neonatal treatment with monosodium glutamate (MSG) results in a substantial degeneration of the inner layer of the retina and a decreased diameter of the optic nerves. Nevertheless, MSG‐treated animals entrain and re‐entrain to a light dark cycle. The question arises whether MSG selectively destroys the optic pathways which are involved in vision but not the retinohypothalamic trart that mediates entrainment. In these experiments not only entrainment and re‐entrainment of the circadian food intake rhythm of MSG‐treated rats was investigated but also the freerunning period under continuous bright and dim light It appears that MSG‐treated rats have shorter freerunning periods under continuous illumination than controls. Therefore, these results suggest that also those pathways involved in entrainment of the circadian food intake rhythm are affected by neonatal treatment with MSG.  相似文献   

16.
Newly born presumptive gynoparae of Aphis fabae were transferred from their prenatal short-day rearing conditions (light-dark 12:12, 15°C) to a variety of postnatal photoperiodic regimes. Long days prevented wing formation and the majority of aphids developed into apterous or alate-apterous intermediate adults. Continued short days resulted, almost exclusively, in winged adults. The photoperiodic-response curve (T = 24) revealed a critical photoperiod of light-dark 13.5:10.5 and further investigations showed that morphogenesis depended more upon night- than day-length. Maximal apterization occurred with 8 or 9 h dark regardless of the length of the photophase but at photophases of 12 h or less the critical night length was reduced to 8.5 h. Night-interruption experiments revealed two peaks of photosensitivity when the scotophase was 12–14 h long but only a single peak was seen with longer dark periods. A series of experiments using early night interruptions followed by extended dark revealed apparent critical night lengths which decreased as the interruption was placed later in the scotophase. Resonance experiments involving 12 or 16 h photophases and extended scotophases at 15°C revealed long-day effects with scotophases shorter than critical and short-day effects with longer dark periods. However, similar regimes at 20°C produced three peaks of apterization 24 and 20 h apart indicating the possibility of a circadian element involved in the photoperiodic response. The results are compared with the photoperiodic responses of other insects.  相似文献   

17.
As a biological clock, circadian rhythms evolve to accomplish a stable (robust) entrainment to environmental cycles, of which light is the most obvious. The mechanism of photic entrainment is not known, but two models of entrainment have been proposed based on whether light has a continuous (parametric) or discrete (nonparametric) effect on the circadian pacemaker. A novel sensitivity analysis is developed to study the circadian entrainment in silico based on a limit cycle approach and applied to a model of Drosophila circadian rhythm. The comparative analyses of complete and skeleton photoperiods suggest a trade-off between the contribution of period modulation (parametric effect) and phase shift (nonparametric effect) in Drosophila circadian entrainment. The results also give suggestions for an experimental study to (in)validate the two models of entrainment.  相似文献   

18.
Previous work on flowering suggested that photoperiodism in Lemna perpusilla 6746 involves an endogenous circadian "clock," but direct evidence requires study of an overt rhythm in the same plant. The CO(2) output rate of axenic cultures supplied with sucrose has been studied in a system using infrared analysis and monitoring four sets of cultures at once. Alternations of (1/4) to 21 hours of dim red light with darkness in 24-hour cycles can entrain the CO(2) output. In darkness following either continuous dim red light or entrainment to a 12(12) light (dark) schedule, the rate oscillates through two maxima and two minima, with a circadian periodicity, before apparently damping. In continuous red light, the rate is linear. The skeleton photoperiodic schedule (1/4)(5(1/2))(1/4)(18), with its two portions highly unequal, rapidly entrains the CO(2) output in a phase relationship which is the same irrespective of which dark period is given first. The schedules (1/4)(13)(1/4)(10(1/2)) and its inverse, however, with two portions more nearly equal in length, differ markedly from each other with respect to manner of entrainment, as they do in their effects on flowering. These and other results strongly support the concept that a circadian clock is an important component of photoperiodism, and they provide a new experimental system in which to study its action.  相似文献   

19.
Wei X  Xue F  Li A 《Journal of insect physiology》2001,47(12):1367-1375
Pseudopidorus fasciata enters diapause as fourth instar larvae at short day lengths. Using 24-h light-dark cycles, the photoperiodic response curves in this species appeared to be similar with a critical night length of 10.5h at temperatures below 30 degrees C. At an average temperature of 30.5 degrees C, the critical night length had shifted to between 15 and 17h. In experiments using non-24-h light-dark cycles, it was clearly demonstrated that the dark period (scotophase) was the decisive phase for a diapause determination. In night interruption experiments using 24-h light-dark cycles, a 1-h light pulse at LD12:12 completely reversed the long night effect and averted diapause in all treatments. At LD 9:15 light pulses of 1-h, 30- or 15-min also averted diapause effectively when both the pre-interruption (D(1)) or the post-interruption scotophases (D(2)) did not exceed the critical night length. If D(1) or D(2) exceeded the critical night length diapause was induced. The most crucial event for the photoperiodic time measurement in this species is the length of the scotophase. A 10-min light pulse placed in the most photosensitive phase reversed diapause in over 50% of the individuals. Night interruption experiments under non-24-h light-dark cycles indicated that the photoperiodic clock measured only D(1) regardless of the length of D(2), suggesting that the most inductive cycles are often those in which L+D are close to 24h. In resonance experiments, this species showed a circadian periodicity at temperatures of 24.5 or 26 degrees C, but not at 30.5 and 23.3 degrees C. On the other hand, Bünsow and skeleton photoperiod experiments failed to reveal the involvement of a circadian system in this photoperiodic clock. These results suggest the photoperiodic clock in this species is a long-night measuring hourglass and the circadian effect found in the final expression of the photoperiodic response in the resonance experiments may be caused by a disturbing effect of the circadian system in unnatural regimes.  相似文献   

20.
The diurnal pattern of parasitization and eclosion of the trichogrammatidUscana lariophaga Steffan, egg parasitoid of the cowpea bruchidCallosobruchus maculatus (Fabricius) was studied for L12:D12 photoperiods. The wasp parasitized eggs throughout each 24-h period with about 70% of the parasitization taking place during the first 12 h regardless whether it was the photophase or the scotophase. More female progeny was produced when the first 12-h period was photophase instead of scotophase. Eclosion of wasps took place over a period of 4 days and occurred during the second half of the scotophase and the first half of the photophase. The number of wasps eclosed during the photophase was similar to that eclosed during the scotophase. Average development time was 8.9 days at 30°C. Male development was completed 6 to 8 h before the females, hence a higher percentage of females emerged in the later eclosion peaks. During scotophases more females eclosed than during photophases. Although the results indicate that the wasp is able to perform under dark storage conditions the effect of permanent low light intensity remains to be studied.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号