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1.
2.
When pupae of Delia antiqua were transferred to constant darkness (DD) from light-dark (LD) cycles or constant light (LL), the sensitivity to light of the circadian clock controlling eclosion increased with age. The daily rhythm of eclosion appeared in both non-diapause and diapause pupae only when this transfer was made during late pharate adult development. When transferred from LL to DD in the early pupal stage, the adult eclosion was weakly rhythmic in non-diapause pupae but arrhythmic in diapause pupae. However, the sensitivity of the circadian clock to temperature cycles or steps was higher in diapause pupae than in non-diapause pupae; in the transfer to a constant 20 degrees C from a thermoperiod of 25 degrees C (12 h)/20 degrees C (12 h) on day 10 after pupation or from chilling (7.5 degrees C) in DD, the adult eclosion from diapause pupae was rhythmic but that from non-diapause pupae arrhythmic. In a transfer to 20 degrees C from the thermoperiod after the initiation of eclosion, rhythmicity was observed in both types of pupae. The larval stage was insensitive to the effect of LD cycle initiating the eclosion rhythm. In D. antiqua pupae in the soil under natural conditions, therefore, the thermoperiod in the late pupal stage would be the most important 'Zeitgeber' for the determination of eclosion timing.  相似文献   

3.
The circadian pacemaker controlling the eclosion rhythm of the high altitude Himalayan strains of Drosophila ananassae captured at Badrinath (5123 m) required ambient temperature at 21°C for the entrainment and free-running processes. At this temperature, their eclosion rhythms entrained to 12h light, 12h dark (LD 12:12) cycles and free-ran when transferred from constant light (LL) to constant darkness (DD) or upon transfer to constant temperature at 21°C following entrainment to temperature cycles in DD. These strains, however, were arrhythmic at 13 or 17°C under identical experimental conditions. Eclosion medians always occurred in the thermophase of temperature cycles whether they were imposed in LL or DD; or whether the thermophase coincided with the photophase or scotophase of the concurrent LD 12:12 cycles. The temperature dependent rhythmicity in the Himalayan strains of D. ananassae is a rare phenotypic plasticity that might have been acquired through natural selection by accentuating the coupling sensing mechanism of the pacemaker to temperature, while simultaneously suppressing the effects of light on the pacemaker.  相似文献   

4.
Eclosion rhythm parameters of D. ananassae strains originating between 8 degrees-34 degrees N were highly variable and latitude dependent. In the field under naturally fluctuating light intensity, temperature and R.H., the amplitude of the rhythm was high and the eclosion gate was narrow; however, under the naturally fluctuating light intensity but at constant temperature and R.H., the amplitude of the rhythm was lowered and the width of eclosion gate was widened. The eclosion rhythm entrained to light-dark (LD) cycles ranging from LD 6:18 to LD 18:6, the width of the eclosion gate was decreased and increased in the short and long photoperiods respectively. Among the strains, both the phase angle difference (psi, the time from lights-off in a 24 hr LD cycle to the eclosion median) and the period of free-running rhythm (tau) in constant darkness varied by about 3 hr and the amplitude of the rhythmicity (Amp) by about 10%. Lower latitude was correlated with late psi (r = -0.69), long tau (r = -0.88) and high Amp value (r = -0.95).  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
Dopamine, the predominant retinal catecholamine, is a neurotransmitter and neuromodulator known to regulate light-adaptive retinal processes. Because dopamine influences several rhythmic events in the retina it is also a candidate for a retinal circadian signal. Using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), we have tested whether dopamine and its breakdown products are rhythmic in Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rats with normal and dystrophic retinas. In both normal and mutant animals entrained to a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle, we found robust daily rhythms of dopamine and its two major metabolites. To address circadian rhythmicity of dopamine content, rats were entrained to light/dark cycles and released into constant darkness, using the circadian rhythm of wheel-running activity as a marker of each individual's circadian phase. Circadian rhythms of dopamine and metabolite content persisted in both wild type and retinally degenerate animals held for two weeks in constant darkness. Our results demonstrate for the first time clear circadian rhythms of dopamine content and turnover in a free-running mammal, and suggest that rods and cones are not required for dopamine rhythmicity.  相似文献   

8.
The circadian wheel-running activity rhythms of individual hamster pups raised and maintained in constant dim light were measured beginning at 18 days of age. Records of the postweaning free-running activity rhythm were used to determine the phase of a pup's rhythm on the day of weaning and its phase relationship to its mother's rhythm. Although raised in constant light, the rhythms of pups within a litter were approximately synchronous and in phase with their mother's activity rhythm. These results indicate that the circadian oscillator underlying the activity rhythm is functional prior to weaning and is entrained by some as yet unidentified aspect of maternal rhythmicity. Furthermore, the results suggest that even in the absence of external entraining cycles, behavioral rhythms, and perhaps physiologic rhythms as well, of a mother and her offspring are normally synchronized.  相似文献   

9.
Irene Bollig 《Planta》1977,135(2):137-142
The phase shifting effect of red light on both the leaf movement rhythm, and on the rhythm of responsiveness of photoperiodic flower induction towards short light breaks (10 min red light), has been studied in Pharbitis nil, strain Violet, and comparisons between the two rhythms have been made. The phase angle differences between the rhythms after a phase shift with 2 or 6 h of red light given at different times during a long dark period were not constant. The results indicate the involvement of two different clocks controlling leaf movement and photoperiodic flower induction.Abbreviations DD continuous darkness - l:D x:y light/dark cycles with x hours of light and y hours of darkness - PPR rhythm of photoperiodic responsiveness towards light break  相似文献   

10.
Eclosion rhythm of the high-altitude Himalayan strain of Drosophila ananassae from Badrinath (altitude 5123 m) was temperature-dependent and at 21°C, it was entrained by cycles of 12 h light: 12 h darkness (LD 12:12) and free-ran in constant darkness, however, it was arrhythmic at 13°C or 17°C under identical experimental conditions (Khare, P. V., Barnabas, R. J., Kanojiya, M., Kulkarni, A. D., Joshi, D. S. (2002). Temperature dependent eclosion rhythmicity in the high altitude Himalayan strains of Drosophila ananassae. Chronobiol. Int. 19:1041-1052). The present studies were designed to see whether or not these strains could be entrained at 13°C, 17°C, and 21°C by two types of LD cycles in which the photoperiod at 100 lux intensity varied from 6 h to 18 h, and the light intensity of LD 14:10 cycles varied from 0.001 lux to 1000 lux. All LD cycles entrained this strain at 21°C but not at 13°C or 17°C. These results demonstrate that the entrainment of eclosion rhythm depends on the ambient temperature and not on the photoperiod or light intensity of LD cycles. Thus the temperature has taken precedence over the light in the entrainment process of eclosion rhythm of the high altitude Himalayan strain of D. ananassae. This may be the result of natural selection in response to the environmental temperature at Badrinath that resembles that of the sub-Arctic region but the photoperiod or light intensity are of the subtropical region.  相似文献   

11.
Eclosion rhythm of the high-altitude Himalayan strain of Drosophila ananassae from Badrinath (altitude 5123 m) was temperature-dependent and at 21°C, it was entrained by cycles of 12 h light: 12 h darkness (LD 12:12) and free-ran in constant darkness, however, it was arrhythmic at 13°C or 17°C under identical experimental conditions (Khare, P. V., Barnabas, R. J., Kanojiya, M., Kulkarni, A. D., Joshi, D. S. (). Temperature dependent eclosion rhythmicity in the high altitude Himalayan strains of Drosophila ananassae. Chronobiol. Int. 19:1041–1052). The present studies were designed to see whether or not these strains could be entrained at 13°C, 17°C, and 21°C by two types of LD cycles in which the photoperiod at 100 lux intensity varied from 6 h to 18 h, and the light intensity of LD 14:10 cycles varied from 0.001 lux to 1000 lux. All LD cycles entrained this strain at 21°C but not at 13°C or 17°C. These results demonstrate that the entrainment of eclosion rhythm depends on the ambient temperature and not on the photoperiod or light intensity of LD cycles. Thus the temperature has taken precedence over the light in the entrainment process of eclosion rhythm of the high altitude Himalayan strain of D. ananassae. This may be the result of natural selection in response to the environmental temperature at Badrinath that resembles that of the sub-Arctic region but the photoperiod or light intensity are of the subtropical region.  相似文献   

12.
The authors show that a circadian clock that regulates locomotor activity in larval zebrafish develops gradually over the first 4 days of life and that exposure to entraining signals late in embryonic development is necessary for initiation of robust behavioral rhythmicity. When zebrafish larvae were transferred from a light-dark (LD) cycle to constant darkness (DD) on the third or fourth day postfertilization, the locomotor activity of almost all fish was rhythmic on days 5 to 9 postfertilization, with peak activity occurring during the subjective day. Rhythm amplitude was higher after four LD cycles than after three LD cycles. When embryos were transferred from LD to DD on the second day postfertilization, only about half of the animals later displayed statistically significant activity rhythms. These rhythms were noisier and of lower amplitude, but phased normally. When zebrafish were raised in DD beginning at 14 h postfertilization, only 22% of them expressed significant circadian rhythmicity as larvae. These rhythms were of low amplitude and phase-locked to the time of handling on the third day rather than to the maternal LD cycle. These results show that behavioral rhythmicity in zebrafish is regulated by a pacemaking system that is sensitive to light by the second day of embryogenesis but continues to develop into the fourth day. This pacemaking system requires environmental signals to initiate or synchronize circadian rhythmicity.  相似文献   

13.
A population of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster was raised in periodic light/dark (LD) cycles of 12:12 h for about 35 generations. Eclosion, locomotor activity, and oviposition were found to be rhythmic in these flies, when assayed in constant laboratory conditions where the light intensity, temperature, humidity and other factors which could possibly act as time cue for these flies, were kept constant. These rhythms also entrained to a LD cycle of 12:12 h in the laboratory with each of them adopting a different temporal niche. The free-running periods (tau) of the eclosion, locomotor activity and oviposition rhythms were significantly different from each other. The peak of eclosion and the onset of locomotor activity occurred during the light phase of the LD cycle, whereas the peak of oviposition was found to occur during the dark phase of the LD cycle. Based on these results, we conclude that different circadian oscillators control the eclosion, locomotor activity and oviposition rhythms in the fruit fly D. melanogaster.  相似文献   

14.
ABSTRACT. Colonies of wild-type Lucilia cuprina (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Calliphoridae) in our laboratory differed greatly in the degree of rhythmicity of their eclosion when exposed to light/dark cycles, constant darkness or constant light. Among colonies reared in the laboratory for thirty-four to eighty-eight generations and others for more than 360 generations, some were consistently rhythmic, others weakly rhythmic and others arrhythmic.
One colony with arrhythmic eclosion was studied further. Arrhythmicity of eclosion in the colony was found to result from homozygosis of a recessive allele (ary) on chromosome 5. Adults from this colony were arrhythmic in spontaneous flight activity under constant darkness though rhythmic under light/dark cycles.  相似文献   

15.
The eclosion and oviposition rhythms of flies from a population of Drosophila melanogaster maintained under constant conditions of the laboratory were assayed under constant light (LL), constant darkness (DD), and light/dark (LD) cycles of 10:10h (T20), 12:12h (T24), and 14:14h (T28). The mean (+/- 95% confidence interval; CI) free-running period (tau) of the oviposition rhythm was 26.34 +/- 1.04h and 24.50 +/- 1.77h in DD and LL, respectively. The eclosion rhythm showed a tau of 23.33 +/- 0.63 h (mean +/- 95% CI) in DD, and eclosion was not rhythmic in LL. The tau of the oviposition rhythm in DD was significantly greater than that of the eclosion rhythm. The eclosion rhythm of all 10 replicate vials entrained to the three periodic light regimes, T20, T24, and T28, whereas the oviposition rhythm of only about 24 and 41% of the individuals entrained to T20 and T24 regimes, respectively, while about 74% of the individuals assayed in T28 regimes showed entrainment. Our results thus clearly indicate that the tau and the limits of entrainment of eclosion rhythm are different from those of the oviposition rhythm, and hence this reinforces the view that separate oscillators may regulate these two rhythms in D. melanogaster.  相似文献   

16.
Mosquitoes exhibit ∼24 h rhythms in physiology and behavior, regulated by the cooperative action of an endogenous circadian clock and the environmental light:dark cycle. Here, we characterize diel (observed under light:dark conditions) time-of-day changes in metabolic detoxification and resistance to insecticide challenge in Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes. A better understanding of mosquito chronobiology will yield insights into developing novel control strategies for this important disease vector. We have previously identified >2000 rhythmically expressed An. gambiae genes. These include metabolic detoxification enzymes peaking at various times throughout the day. Especially interesting was the identification of rhythmic genes encoding enzymes capable of pyrethroid and/or DDT metabolism (CYP6M2, CYP6P3, CYP6Z1, and GSTE2). We hypothesized that these temporal changes in gene expression would confer time-of-day specific changes in metabolic detoxification and responses to insecticide challenge. An. gambiae mosquitoes (adult female Pimperena and Mali-NIH strains) were tested by gene expression analysis for diel rhythms in key genes associated with insecticidal resistance. Biochemical assays for total GST, esterase, and oxidase enzymatic activities were undertaken on time-specific mosquito head and body protein lysates. To determine for rhythmic susceptibility to insecticides by survivorship, mosquitoes were exposed to DDT or deltamethrin across the diel cycle. We report the occurrence of temporal changes in GST activity in samples extracted from the body and head with a single peak at late-night to dawn, but no rhythms were detected in oxidase or esterase activity. The Pimperena strain was found to be resistant to insecticidal challenge, and subsequent genomic analysis revealed the presence of the resistance-conferring kdr mutation. We observed diel rhythmicity in key insecticide detoxification genes in the Mali-NIH strain, with peak phases as previously reported in the Pimperena strain. The insecticide sensitive Mali-NIH strain mosquitoes exhibited a diel rhythm in survivorship to DDT exposure and a bimodal variation to deltamethrin challenge. Our results demonstrate rhythms in detoxification and pesticide susceptibility in An. gambiae mosquitoes; this knowledge could be incorporated into mosquito control and experimental design strategies, and contributes to our basic understanding of mosquito biology.  相似文献   

17.
The sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) cultivar 58M, which contains the null mutant phytochrome B gene, shows reduced photoperiodic sensitivity and exhibits a shade-avoidance phenotype. Ethylene production by seedlings of wild-type and phytochrome B mutant cultivars was monitored every 3 h, and both cultivars were found to produce ethylene in a circadian rhythm, with peak production occurring during the day. The phytochrome B mutant produces rhythmic peaks of ethylene with approximately 10 times the amplitude of the wild-type counterpart with the same period and diurnal timing. The source of the mutant's additional ethylene is the shoot. The diurnal rhythm can be produced with either light or temperature cycles; however, both light and temperature cycles are required for circadian entrainment. The temperature signal overrides the light signal in the production of diurnal rhythms, because seedlings grown under thermoperiods reversed with the photoperiod produced ethylene peaks during the warm nights. To examine the effect of extreme shading on ethylene production, seedlings were grown under dim, far-red-enriched light. This treatment duplicated the phytochrome B mutant's shade-avoidance phenotype in the wild type and caused the wild type to produce ethylene peaks similar to those observed in the mutant. The results confirm that phytochrome B is not required for proper function of circadian timing, but it may be involved in modulating physiological rhythms driven by the biological clock oscillator.  相似文献   

18.
The supratidal amphipod Talorchestia longicornis Say has a circadian rhythm in activity, in which it is active on the substrate surface at night and inactive in burrows during the day. The present study determined: (1) the circadian rhythms in individual versus groups of amphipods; (2) the range of temperature cycles that entrain the circadian rhythm; (3) entrainment by high-temperature cycles versus light?:?dark cycles, and (4) seasonal substrate temperature cycles. The circadian rhythm was determined by monitoring temporal changes in surface activity using a video system. Individual and groups of amphipods have similar circadian rhythms. Entrainment occurred only to temperature cycles that included temperatures below 20°C (10–20, 15–20, 17–19, 15–25°C) but not to temperatures above 20°C (20–25, 20–30°C), and required only a 2°C temperature cycle (17–19°C). Diel substrate temperatures were above 20°C in the summer and below 20°C during the winter. Upon simultaneous exposure to a diel high-temperature cycle (20–30°C) and a light?:?dark cycle phased differently, amphipods entrained to the light?:?dark cycle. Past studies found that a temperature cycle below 20°C overrode the light?:?dark cycle for entrainment. The functional significance of this change in entrainment cues may be that while buried during the winter, the activity rhythm remains in phase with the day?:?night cycle by the substrate temperature cycles. During the summer, T. longicornis switches to the light?:?dark cycle for entrainment, perhaps as a mechanism to phase activity precisely to the short summer nights.  相似文献   

19.
The early and late strains for phase angle difference (Φ) of adult locomotor activity in Drosophila rajasekari were developed by artificial selection; these strains differed in Φ, activity pattern, activity level, free-running period (τ) in constant darkness (DD) and light induced phase shifts from those of the wild type (Joshi, 1998). The present studies were designed to determine whether or not the psi-mutations for adult locomotor activity rhythm had also altered the fundamental properties of the eclosion rhythms in these strains. The circadian rhythms of eclosion have been studied in the wild type, the early and late strains. In contrast to the effects on the locomotor activity rhythms in the early and late strains, the psi-mutations have no apparent effect on the eclosion median in light-dark cycles of 12 : 12 h, on τ in DD, light induced phase shifts or subjective light sensitivity in these strains. Thus the psi-mutations for the adult locomotor activity rhythms in D. rajasekari appear to be rhythm-specific mutations altering the locomotor rhythms but not the eclosion rhythms.  相似文献   

20.
The eclosion and oviposition rhythms of flies from a population of Drosophila melanogaster maintained under constant conditions of the laboratory were assayed under constant light (LL), constant darkness (DD), and light/dark (LD) cycles of 10:10 h (T20), 12:12 h (T24), and 14:14 h (T28). The mean (±95% confidence interval; CI) free-running period (τ) of the oviposition rhythm was 26.34 ± 1.04 h and 24.50 ± 1.77 h in DD and LL, respectively. The eclosion rhythm showed a τ of 23.33 ± 0.63 h (mean ± 95% CI) in DD, and eclosion was not rhythmic in LL. The τ of the oviposition rhythm in DD was significantly greater than that of the eclosion rhythm. The eclosion rhythm of all 10 replicate vials entrained to the three periodic light regimes, T20, T24, and T28, whereas the oviposition rhythm of only about 24 and 41% of the individuals entrained to T20 and T24 regimes, respectively, while about 74% of the individuals assayed in T28 regimes showed entrainment. Our results thus clearly indicate that the τ and the limits of entrainment of eclosion rhythm are different from those of the oviposition rhythm, and hence this reinforces the view that separate oscillators may regulate these two rhythms in D. melanogaster.  相似文献   

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