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1.
Circadian clocks regulate the daily temporal structure of physiological and behavioural functions. In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster Meigen, disruption of daily rhythms is suggested to reduce the fly's lifespan. In the present study, because pairs of mixed‐sex flies are known to show an activity pattern different from that of individual flies, this hypothesis is tested by measuring the lifespan of flies housed same‐sexually or mixed‐sexually under an LD 12 : 12 h photocycle at a constant temperature of 25 °C. The effect of housing wild‐type (Canton‐S) flies with period (per) circadian clock mutant flies is also examined because the mutant flies have different daily activity patterns. When males and females of wild‐type flies are housed together, their lifespan is substantially lengthened (males) or shortened (females) compared with same‐sex housed flies. The shortening of the lifespan in females is significantly enhanced when mated with per mutant males. The shortening effects are significantly reduced when the mixed‐sex interaction is limited for the first 5 days after emergence. A slight elongation in lifespan, rather than a reduction, occurs when wild‐type females are housed same‐sexually with per0 or perL mutant flies. In male flies, the elongation of lifespan occurs not only when wild‐type males are housed with wild‐type, per0 or perL females, but also when housed with per0 or perS mutant males. Mixed‐sex couples always show altered daily locomotor rhythms with an enhanced night‐time activity, whereas same‐sex couples show daily behavioural profiles slightly altered but essentially similar to a sum of the respective two flies. No significant correlation is found between the lifespan and reproductive capacity. These results suggest that the alteration of daily activity rhythms and sexual interaction may have significant impact on the fly's lifespan.  相似文献   

2.
Circadian clocks time developmental stages of fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster, while light/dark (LD) cycles delimit emergence of adults, conceding only during the “allowed gate.” Previous studies have revealed that time‐to‐emergence can be altered by mutations in the core clock gene period (per), or by altering the length of LD cycles. Since this evidence came from studies on genetically manipulated flies, or on flies maintained under LD cycles with limited range of periods, inferences that can be drawn are limited. Moreover, the extent of shortening or lengthening of time‐to‐emergence remains yet unknown. In order to pursue this further, we assayed time‐to‐emergence of D. melanogaster under 12 different LD cycles as well as in constant light (LL) and constant dark conditions (DD). Time‐to‐emergence in flies occurred earlier under LL than in LD cycles and DD. Among the LD cycles, time‐to‐emergence occurred earlier under T4T8, followed by T36T48, and then T12T32, suggesting that egg‐to‐emergence duration in flies becomes shorter when the length of LD cycles deviates from 24 h, bearing a strong positive and a marginally negative correlation with day length, for values shorter and longer than 24 h, respectively. These results suggest that the extent of mismatch between the period of circadian clocks and environmental cycles determines the time‐to‐emergence in Drosophila.  相似文献   

3.

Background

In the first optic neuropil (lamina) of the fly''s visual system, monopolar cells L1 and L2 and glia show circadian rhythms in morphological plasticity. They change their size and shape during the day and night. The most pronounced changes have been detected in circadian size of the L2 axons. Looking for a functional significance of the circadian plasticity observed in axons, we examined the morphological plasticity of the L2 dendrites. They extend from axons and harbor postsynaptic sites of tetrad synaptic contacts from the photoreceptor terminals.

Methodology/Principal Findings

The plasticity of L2 dendrites was evaluated by measuring an outline of the L2 dendritic trees. These were from confocal images of cross sections of L2 cells labeled with GFP. They were in wild-type and clock mutant flies held under different light conditions and sacrified at different time points. We found that the L2 dendrites are longest at the beginning of the day in both males and females. This rhythm observed under a day/night regime (LD) was maintained in constant darkness (DD) but not in continuous light (LL). This rhythm was not present in the arrhythmic per01 mutant in LD or in DD. In the clock photoreceptor cryb mutant the rhythm was maintained but its pattern was different than that observed in wild-type flies.

Conclusions/Significance

The results obtained showed that the L2 dendrites exhibit circadian structural plasticity. Their morphology is controlled by the per gene-dependent circadian clock. The L2 dendrites are longest at the beginning of the day when the daytime tetrad presynaptic sites are most numerous and L2 axons are swollen. The presence of the rhythm, but with a different pattern in cryb mutants in LD and DD indicates a new role of cry in the visual system. The new role is in maintaining the circadian pattern of changes of the L2 dendrite length and shape.  相似文献   

4.
Dual-oscillator systems that control morning and evening activities can be found in a wide range of animals. The two coupled oscillators track dawn and dusk and flexibly adapt their phase relationship to seasonal changes. This is also true for the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster that serves as model organism to understand the molecular and anatomical bases of the dual-oscillator system. In the present study, the authors investigated which temperature parameters are crucial for timing morning and evening activity peaks by applying natural-like temperature cycles with different daylengths. The authors found that the morning peak synchronizes to the temperature increase in the morning and the evening peak to the temperature decrease in the afternoon. The two peaks did not occur at fixed absolute temperatures, but responded flexibly to daylength and overall temperature level. Especially, the phase of the evening peak clearly depended on the absolute temperature level: it was delayed at high temperatures, whereas the phase of the M peak was less influenced. This suggests that the two oscillators have different temperature sensitivities. The bimodal activity rhythm was absent in the circadian clock mutants ClkJrk and cyc01 and reduced in per01 and tim01 mutants. Whereas the activity of ClkJrk mutants just followed the temperature cycles, that of per01 and tim01 mutants did not, suggesting that these mutants are not completely clockless. This study revealed new characteristics of the dual-oscillator system in Drosophila that were not detected under different photoperiods. (Author correspondence: )  相似文献   

5.
Summary ThenorpA H44 phototransduction mutant ofDrosophila melanogaster, an allele that, on eclosion, does not exhibit a receptor potential was found, at later ages, to undergo light and temperature dependent degeneration of its photoreceptors as well as decreases in rhodopsin concentration. Pseudopupil measurements and light and electron microscopy were used to monitor the structure of the photoreceptors. WhennorpA H44 flies were maintained exclusively in the dark, no changes in structure or rhodopsin concentration were observed. When maintained on a 12 h light-12 h dark cycle, structural changes were first observed at 6 days of age for flies maintained at 24 °C or at 12 days of age for flies maintained at 19 °C. When the light-dark cycle was initiated after 10 days in the dark there was a more rapid loss of rhodopsin concentration and pseudopupil. The data suggest that even in the dark, although no obvious changes in structure or rhodopsin concentration were observed, certain processes that support these components had been affected.NorpA P12 , an allele that exhibits small receptor potential amplitudes, also displayed age- and light-dependent photoreceptor degeneration and decreases in rhodopsin concentration, whereas no degeneration or decreases in rhodopsin were observed innorpA P16 , an allele that exhibits receptor potential amplitudes similar to those of wild-type. The data suggest that the processes that affect phototransduction, such as the phosphatidylinositol cycle, have a long-term role in the maintenance of rhodopsin concentration and photoreceptor integrity.Abbreviation PI phosphatidylinositol  相似文献   

6.
Artificial moonlight was recently shown to shift the endogenous clock of fruit flies and make them nocturnal. To test whether this nocturnal activity is partly due to masking effects of light, we exposed the clock‐mutants per01, tim01, per01;tim01, cyc01, and ClkJRK to light/dark and light/dim‐light cycles and determined the activity level during the day and night. We found that under moonlit nights, all clock mutants shifted their activity significantly into the night, suggesting that this effect is independent of the clock. We also recorded the flies under continuous artificial moonlight and darkness to judge the effect of dim constant light on the activity level. All mutants, except ClkJRK flies, were significantly more active under artificial moonlight conditions than under complete darkness. Unexpectedly, we found residual rhythmicity of per01 and especially tim01 mutants under these conditions, suggesting that TIM and especially PER retained some activity in the absence of its respective partner. Nevertheless, as even the double mutants and the cyc01 and ClkJRK mutants shifted their activity into the night, we conclude that dim light stimulates the activity of fruit flies in a clock‐independent manner. Thus, nocturnal light has a twofold influence on flies: it shifts the circadian clock, and it increases nocturnal activity independently of the clock. The latter was also observed in some primates by others and might therefore be of a more general validity.  相似文献   

7.
Disruption of phospholipase C-β (PLC) by the norpA mutations of Drosophila renders flies blind by affecting the light-evoked photoreceptor potential. We report here that the norpA-coded PLC modulates the 1,4-dihydropyridine (DHP)-sensitive Ca2+ channels in larval muscles. The DHP-sensitive current was reduced in the norpA mutants. Application of 1 μM phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (TPA) and 1 μM phorbol 12,13-didecanoate (PDD), activators of protein kinase C (PKC), rescued the current in the mutant fibers without significantly affecting the normal current. 4α-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate (4αPDD), an inactive analog of PDD, did not affect either the normal or the mutant current. One micromolar bisindolylmaleimide (BIM), an inhibitor of PKC, reduced the current in the normal fibers without affecting the mutant current. 300 μM sn-1,2-dioctanoyl-glycerol (DOG), an analog of diacylglycerol (DAG), increased the current in the mutant fibers. These experiments suggest that the DHP-sensitive Ca2+ channels in Drosophila may be modulated by the PLC-DAG-PKC pathway, and that the same PLC isozyme which is involved in phototransduction in the adult flies may also modulate muscle Ca2+ channels in the larval stage of development. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 33: 265–275, 1997  相似文献   

8.
The properties of the pacemaker controlling the adult locomotor activity rhythm of the high‐altitude Himalayan (haH) strain (Hemkund Sahib, 4121 m above sea level) of Drosophila helvetica are strikingly different from those of the low‐altitude Himalayan (laH) strain (Birahi, 1132 m above sea level) of the same species. The haH strain has a unimodal activity pattern with a delayed peak occurring about 4.5 h after lights‐on of the entraining light‐dark (LD) cycle, while the laH strain has a bimodal activity pattern with the morning and evening peaks. It is rather unusual for a wild type strain of any Drosophila species to have a unimodal activity pattern during entrainment as observed in the haH strain. The single activity peak of the haH strain is regarded as a consequence of delayed morning peak merging with the evening one. Three experiments were performed to test this hypothesis. The first experiment examined whether the single activity peak could be dissociated into two components by LD cycles in which photoperiods varied from 10 to 16 h per 24 h. The haH strain again exhibited a unimodal activity pattern with a delayed peak in 10, 12, and 14 h photoperiods but a bimodal activity pattern in 16 h photoperiod. The laH strain had bimodality in 10 and 12 h photoperiods, unimodality in a 14 h photoperiod, but complete arrhythmicity in a 16 h photoperiod.

In the second experiment, the haH flies were transferred from LD 16∶8 to LL at 5 lux to confirm whether the bimodality of this strain in LD 16∶8 cycles was not the result of masking by the long photoperiod of 16 h. Bimodality of the haH strain persisted in LL too; moreover, the morning component free‐ran with period (τ) <24 h, while the evening component free‐ran with τ>24 h. The third experiment examined the LL‐induced splitting of activity peak of the haH strain. Flies were transferred from LD 12∶12 cycles to LL at 0, 1, 5, and 15 lux. The haH strain was rhythmic in LL at 0 and 1 lux with a unimodal activity pattern. It was also rhythmic in LL at 5 lux, but the single activity peak was split into two discrete components; the morning component free‐ran with τ<24 h, while the evening component free‐ran with τ>24 h. This strain, however, was completely arrhythmic in LL at 15 lux. The laH strain was uniformly arrhythmic in LL at all levels of light intensity. These results suggest that the single but late activity component of the haH strain during entrainment appears to be the consequence of merging the delayed morning peak with the evening one as an adaptation to the environmental conditions at the altitude of origin of this strain, where these flies begin activity in the forenoon owing to non‐permissible low temperature in the morning.  相似文献   

9.
Here, we show that in a skeleton photoperiod where all midday light is removed from a standard laboratory 12:12 LD photoperiod, a large diurnal peak of activity is revealed that is continuous with the E peak seen in constant dark (DD). We further show that the circadian clock gene tim regulates light-dependent masking of daytime activity, but the clock gene per does not. Finally, relative to wild-type flies, mutants for both of these clock genes showed increased nighttime activity in the skeleton photoperiod but not in the standard photoperiod. This result suggests that nighttime activity is suppressed by the intact circadian clock, and in its absence, by exposure to a standard photoperiod. These results support and extend the literature addressing the complex interactions between masking and clock-controlled components of overt circadian rhythms.  相似文献   

10.
In this paper, we report the results of our extensive study on eclosion rhythm of four independent populations of Drosophila melanogaster that were reared in constant light (LL) environment of the laboratory for more than 700 generations. The eclosion rhythm of these flies was assayed under LL, constant darkness (DD) and three periodic light‐dark (LD) cycles (T20, T24, and T28). The percentage of vials from each population that exhibited circadian rhythm of eclosion in DD and in LL (intensity of approximately 100 lux) was about 90% and 18%, respectively. The mean free‐running period (τ) of eclosion rhythm in DD was 22.85 ± 0.87 h (mean ± SD). Eclosion rhythm of these flies entrained to all the three periodic LD cycles, and the phase relationship (ψ) of the peak of eclosion with respect to “lights‐on” of the LD cycle was significantly different in the three periodic light regimes (T20, T24, and T28). The results thus clearly demonstrate that these flies have preserved the ability to exhibit circadian rhythm of eclosion and the ability to entrain to a wide range of periodic LD cycles even after being in an aperiodic environment for several hundred generations. This suggests that circadian clocks may have intrinsic adaptive value accrued perhaps from coordinating internal metabolic cycles in constant conditions, and that the entrainment mechanisms of circadian clocks are possibly an integral part of the clockwork.  相似文献   

11.
The prolonged depolarizing after potential (PDA) in the R1–6 receptors of the fly was used to isolate intermediate processes in phototransduction which are not manifested directly in the voltage response. It is first demonstrated that a pigment shift by light from metarhodopsin to rhodopsin in four species of the flies: Drosophila, Calliphora, Chrysomya and Musca induces an independent antagonistic process to the PDA, which is manifested in a strong inhibitory effect on PDA induction and is called the anti-PDA.By using mutants of Drosophila the existence of processes underlying the PDA were examined. The norpA H52and the trp mutant were used in which the voltage response of the photoreceptors could be reversibly abolished by elavated temperature and long intense light respectively. It is shown that the excitatory process underlying the PDA could be induced and depressed in conditions that block the voltage response of the photoreceptors, thus indicating the existance of intermediate processes which link the pigment activation by light to the PDA voltage response.Based on material presented at the European Neurosciences Meeting, Florence, September 1978  相似文献   

12.
Effects of aging on the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity in males of Drosophila nasuta were investigated. The adult life of males was divided in 1-3 stages according to spontaneous changes in free-running period x in constant darkness (DD): stage 1, days 1-19; stage 2, days 20-36; stage 3, days 37-43. Stage 1 was characterized by a bimodal activity pattern with a short light-induced morning peak and a prolonged evening peak when the flies were entrained to light-dark cycles of 12 hours of light, 12 hours of darkness (LD 12:12). The morning peak had a phase angle difference Ψm (Ψ, the time from lights on in LD 12:12 cycles to the onset of morning peak) of about 0.1h, while Ψe (Ψ of evening peak) was about 9h at stage 1. The transient morning peak was curtailed at the end of stage 1. At stage 2, the Ψe was about 10h, and the activity end was delayed by an addition of about 3h of activity in the scotophase. The changes in W during DD free runs were determined in two groups of flies: flies reared in LD 12:12 and flies reared in DD. In both groups, W increased from about 23h at stage 1 to about 25h at stage 2. Stage 3 was characterized by arrhythmicity associated with highest mean activity level (total number of passes/fly/day) in the entrained and both free-running groups. The mean activity level increased significantly from stage 1 to stage 3 in all three groups of flies.  相似文献   

13.
Drosophila FMR1 mutants are models of human fragile X syndrome. They show a loss of locomotor activity rhythm and severe degradation of eclosion timing. We analyzed the circadian behavior of FMR1 mutants (dfmr1(B55)) in two genetic backgrounds, yellow white (yw) and Canton S (CS). The arrhythmic phenotype of circadian locomotor activity in constant darkness (DD) did not significantly change in either genetic background. Surprisingly, eclosion timing was completely restored by backcrossing dfmr1(B55) with yw or CS flies. Morphological analysis of the small ventrally located lateral neurons of FMR1 mutants revealed that the dorsal-projection area was significantly larger in arrhythmic than rhythmic flies. In addition, dfmr1(B55) mutants in both genetic backgrounds had a significantly lower evening peak in the light-dark (LD) cycle. These results indicate that lack of FMR1 does not affect eclosion timing, but alters locomotor activity patterns in both LD and DD conditions by affecting the arborization of small ventrally located lateral neurons. Thus, the FMR1 gene may regulate the circadian-related locomotor activity of Drosophila.  相似文献   

14.
Fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster females display rhythmic egg-laying under 12:12?h light/dark (LD) cycles which persists with near 24?h periodicity under constant darkness (DD). We have shown previously that persistence of this rhythm does not require the neurons expressing pigment dispersing factor (PDF), thought to be the canonical circadian pacemakers, and proposed that it could be controlled by peripheral clocks or regulated/triggered by the act of mating. We assayed egg-laying behaviour of wild-type Canton S (CS) females under LD, DD and constant light (LL) conditions in three different physiological states; as virgins, as females allowed to mate with males for 1?day and as females allowed to mate for the entire duration of the assay. Here, we report the presence of a circadian rhythm in egg-laying in virgin D. melanogaster females. We also found that egg-laying behaviour of 70 and 90% females from all the three male presence/absence protocols follows circadian rhythmicity under DD and LL, with periods ranging between 18 and 30?h. The egg-laying rhythm of all virgin females synchronized to LD cycles with a peak occurring soon after lights-off. The rhythm in virgins was remarkably robust with maximum number of eggs deposited immediately after lights-off in contrast to mated females which show higher egg-laying during the day. These results suggest that the egg-laying rhythm of D. melanogaster is endogenously driven and is neither regulated nor triggered by the act of mating; instead, the presence of males results in reduction in entrainment to LD cycles.  相似文献   

15.
The relative constancy of the circadian period over a wide range of temperatures is a general property of circadian rhythms. Insights into the molecular mechanisms of temperature compensation are emerging from genetic and molecular genetic studies of the period (per) and timeless (tim) genes in Drosophila. These genes encode proteins that are thought to be part of a negative feedback cycle, which results in circadian oscillations of both per and tim mRNA, as well as a complex of the two proteins. Complex formation is temporally regulated and apparently necessary for nuclear localization of both per and tim proteins. While insights into the roles of per and tim in temperature compensation have been intriguing, they have also been somewhat perplexing. For instance, the interaction of wild-type per peptides is relatively insensitive to temperature in the yeast two-hybrid assay or in assays employing in-vitro-translated peptides, while the interaction of perL mutant peptides is reduced at a high temperature. Apparently, the perL mutation increases an intramolecular interaction between different parts of the per peptide in these assays, and this interaction reduces the amount of per homodimer. On the other hand, the same assays show that the intermolecular interaction between the per and tim peptides is reduced at a high temperature by the perL mutation; this reduction does not require the competing intramolecular interaction. Despite this difference, in all of the experiments employing these assays the perL mutation has rendered per-per and per-tim peptide interactions sensitive to high temperature, so it is likely that one or both of these reduced interactions contribute to the longer circadian periods at high temperature in perL mutant flies. However, the timSL and perS mutations, as well as deletion of the Thr-Gly repeats from per, affect temperature compensation but have not been shown to affect these molecular interactions of per and tim. Finally, a recent report of oscillating per and tim proteins in the cytoplasm (rather than the nuclei) of silk moth neurons may suggest an alternative mechanism for per and tim function in these cells. (Chronobiology International 14(5), 455–468, 1997)  相似文献   

16.
Laboratory selection for the phase angle difference (Ψ, the time from lights-off in a 24 h light–dark cycle to an activity onset) of the adult locomotor activity in Drosophila rajasekari reared in LD (light:dark cycles) of 12:12 h for 59 generations resulted in the early and late strains which differed in Ψ value by about 8 h. The selection affected the activity pattern in LD 12:12; in contrast to the wild-type, which had a broad plateau of activity pattern, the early strain exhibited a biphasic activity pattern with morning and evening peaks, whereas the late strain had a single evening peak which extended for 6 h in the dark. The selection significantly decreased and increased the activity level per cycle in LD 12:12, continuous darkness (DD) and continuous light (LL) in the early and late strains respectiv ely when compared to that of the wild-type (P < 0.01). The free running period (τ) in DD was shortened in the early strain and lengthened in the late strain by the shortening and lengthening of the activity phases respectively, the rest phases remained unchanged in these strains from that of the wild-type. Phase response curves (PRCs) were measured for light pulses in all strains, the PRC for the early strain was characterized by larger phase shifts when compared to the PRC for the late or for the wild type flies. The ability of τ to be progressively lengthened by increasing intensity of LL was increased and decreased in the early and late strains respectively. Moreover, the threshold light intensity of LL to generate arrhythmicity was apparently decreased in the early strain and increased in the late strain, suggesting that the selection for Ψ had differently affected the subjective light sensitivity in these strains.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Coupling between cyclically varying external light and an endogenous biochemical oscillator known as the circadian clock, modulates a rhythmic pattern with two prominent peaks in the locomotion of Drosophila melanogaster. A morning peak appears around the time lights turn on and an evening peak appears just before lights turn off. The close association between the peaks and the external 12:12 hour light/dark photoperiod means that respective morning and evening peaks of individual flies are well-synchronized in time and, consequently, feature prominently in population-averaged data. Here, we report on a brief but strong stochastic burst in fly activity that, in contrast to morning and evening peaks, is detectable only in single fly recordings. This burst was observed across 3 wild-type strains of Drosophila melanogaster. In a single fly recording, the burst is likely to appear once randomly within 0.5–5 hours after lights turn on, last for only 2–3 minutes and yet show 5 times greater activity compared to the maximum of morning peak with data binned in 3 minutes. Owing to its variable timing and short duration, the burst is virtually undetectable in population-averaged data. We use a locally-built illumination system to study the burst and find that its incidence in a population correlates with light intensity, with ~85% of control flies showing the behavior at 8000 lux (1942 μW/cm2). Consistent with that finding, several mutant flies with impaired vision show substantially reduced frequency of the burst. Additionally, we find that genetic ablation of the clock has insignificant effect on burst frequency. Together, these data suggest that the pronounced burst is likely generated by a light-activated circuit that is independent of the circadian clock.  相似文献   

19.
Animals fed daily at the same time exhibit circadian food‐anticipatory activity (FAA), which has been suggested to be driven by one or several food‐entrainable oscillators (FEOs). FAA is altered in mice lacking some circadian genes essential for timekeeping in the main suprachiasmatic clock (SCN). Here, we confirmed that single mutations of clock genes Per1?/? and Per2Brdm1 alter FAA expression in constant darkness (DD) or under a light–dark cycle (LD). Furthermore, we found that Per1?/?;Per2Brdm1 and Per2Brdm1;Cry1?/? double mutant animals did not display a stable and significant FAA either in DD or LD. Interestingly, rescued behavioural rhythms in Per2Brdm1;Cry2?/? mice in DD were totally entrained to feeding time and re‐synchronized after phase‐shifts of mealtime, indicating a higher SCN sensitivity to feeding cues. However, under an LD cycle and restricted feeding at midday, FAA in double Per2Brdm1;Cry2?/? mutant mice was absent. These results indicate that shutting down one or two clock genes results in altered circadian meal anticipation. Moreover, we show that in a genetically rescued SCN clock (Per2Brdm1;Cry2?/?), food is a powerful zeitgeber to entrain behavioural rhythms, leading the SCN to be more sensitive to feeding cues than in wild‐type littermates.  相似文献   

20.
We used four replicate outbred populations of Drosophila melanogaster to investigate whether the light regimes experienced during the pre-adult (larval and pupal) and early adult stages influence the free-running period (τDD) of the circadian locomotor activity rhythm of adult flies. In a series of two experiments four different populations of flies were raised from egg to eclosion in constant light (LL), in light/dark (LD) 12:12 h cycle, and in constant darkness (DD). In the first experiment the adult male and female flies were directly transferred into DD and their locomotor activity was monitored, while in the second experiment the locomotor activity of the emerging adult flies was first assayed in LD 12:12 h for 15 days and then in DD for another 15 days. The τDD of the locomotor activity rhythm of flies that were raised in all the three light regimes, LL, LD 12:12 h and in DD was significantly different from each other. The τDD of the locomotor activity rhythm of the flies, which were raised in DD during their pre-adult stages, was significantly shorter than that of flies that were raised as pre-adults in LL regime, which in turn was significantly shorter than that of flies raised in LD 12:12 h regime. This pattern was consistent across both the experiments. The results of our experiments serve to emphasise the fact that in order to draw meaningful inferences about circadian rhythm parameters in insects, adequate attention should be paid to control and specify the environment in which pre-adult rearing takes place. The pattern of pre-adult and early adult light regime effects that we see differs from that previously observed in studies of mutant strains of D. melanogaster, and therefore, also points to the potential importance of inter-strain differences in the response of circadian organisation to external influences.  相似文献   

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