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1.
Circadian rhythms are regarded as essentially ubiquitous features of animal behavior and are thought to confer important adaptive advantages. However, although circadian systems of rodents have been among the most extensively studied, most comparative biology is restricted to a few related species. In this study, the circadian organization of locomotor activity was studied in the subterranean, solitary north Argentinean rodent, Ctenomys knightii. The genus, Ctenomys, commonly known as Tuco‐tucos, comprises more than 50 known species over a range that extends from 12°S latitude into Patagonia, and includes at least one social species. The genus, therefore, is ideal for comparative and ecological studies of circadian rhythms. Ctenomys knightii is the first of these to be studied for its circadian behavior. All animals were wild caught but adapted quickly to laboratory conditions, with clear and precise activity‐rest rhythms in a light‐dark (LD) cycle and strongly nocturnal wheel running behavior. In constant dark (DD), the rhythm expression persisted with free‐running periods always longer than 24 h. Upon reinstatement of the LD cycle, rhythms resynchronized rapidly with large phase advances in 7/8 animals. In constant light (LL), six animals had free‐running periods shorter than in DD, and 4/8 showed evidence of “splitting.” We conclude that under laboratory conditions, in wheel‐running cages, this species shows a clear nocturnal rhythmic organization controlled by an endogenous circadian oscillator that is entrained to 24 h LD cycles, predominantly by light‐induced advances, and shows the same interindividual variable responses to constant light as reported in other non‐subterranean species. These data are the first step toward understanding the chronobiology of the largest genus of subterranean rodents.  相似文献   

2.
Arctic and subarctic environments are exposed to extreme light: dark (LD) regimes, including periods of constant light (LL) and constant dark (DD) and large daily changes in day length, but very little is known about circadian rhythms of mammals at high latitudes. The authors investigated the circadian rhythms of a subarctic population of northern red-backed voles (Clethrionomys rutilus). Both wild-caught and third-generation laboratory-bred animals showed predominantly nocturnal patterns of wheel running when exposed to a 16:8 LD cycle. In LL and DD conditions, animals displayed large phenotypic variation in circadian rhythms. Compared to wheel-running rhythms under a 16:8 LD cycle, the robustness of circadian activity rhythms decreased among all animals tested in LL and DD (i.e., decreased chi-squared periodogram waveform amplitude). A large segment of the population became noncircadian (60% in DD, 72% in LL) within 8 weeks of exposure to constant lighting conditions, of which the majority became ultradian, with a few individuals becoming arrhythmic, indicating highly labile circadian organization. Wild-caught and laboratory-bred animals that remained circadian in wheel running displayed free-running periods between 23.3 and 24.8 h. A phase-response curve to light pulses in DD showed significant phase delays at circadian times 12 and 15, indicating the capacity to entrain to rapidly changing day lengths at high latitudes. Whether this phenotypic variation in circadian organization, with circadian, ultradian, and arrhythmic wheel-running activity patterns in constant lighting conditions, is a novel adaptation to life in the arctic remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

3.
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase knock out mice (eNOS‐/‐) are mildly hypertensive in comparison to wild‐type (WT) mice. Hypertension in eNOS‐/‐ mice is partly the result of an increase in peripheral resistance due to the absence of the vasodilatory action of NO. No data are available for these animals regarding the 24 h blood pressure profile under the 12:12 h light‐dark cycle (LD) and constant dark (DD) conditions. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate by radiotelemetry the circadian rhythms in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of six eNOS‐/‐ mice and five wild‐type mice under LD and DD. Data were collected beginning 3 wks after operation (implantation of sensor) for 2 wks under LD and for another 2 wks thereafter under DD. Our results show that eNOS‐/‐ mice were hypertensive under all experimental conditions. SBP and DBP were significantly higher by about 15% in eNOS‐/‐ mice. No differences were found in the pattern of the circadian rhythms, rhythmicity, or period lengths during LD or DD. The genetic deletion of eNOS seems to lead to higher SBP and DBP, but the circadian blood pressure pattern is still preserved with higher values during the night (active phase) and lower values during the daytime (rest phase). Thus, endothelial‐derived NO plays an important role in the regulation of vascular tone and haemodynamics, but it is not important for the circadian organization of SBP and DBP.  相似文献   

4.
Induced and spontaneous wheel running can alter the phase and period (tau) of circadian rhythms in rodents. The relationship between spontaneous running and the phase angle (psi) of entrainment to 24-h light-dark (LD) cycles was evaluated in C57BL/6j mice. With a wheel freely available, psi was significantly correlated with the absolute (r = 0.32) and relative (r = 0.44) amount of activity during the first 2 h of the activity period. When wheels were locked during the first half of the night in LD and then unlocked in constant dark (DD), mice exhibited a delayed psi and lengthened tau compared with mice that had wheels locked during the second half of the night. In DD, tau correlated negatively with total daily activity. To evaluate if wheel running modulates the phase-resetting actions of LD, phase shifts to light pulses were measured at two time points in DD, when daily activity levels differed by 40%. Phase delays to light were 56% greater when activity levels were lower. However, in a counterbalanced follow-up experiment, phase advances and delays to light pulses were not affected by the availability of wheels, although an effect of time in DD was replicated. Spontaneous activity can regulate psi and tau without altering the response of the pacemaker to light.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

Inbred mouse strains differ in the expression of free‐running circadian activity rhythms. Although previous studies have suggested that BALB/c mice fail to display coherent rhythmicity under constant light, these studies presented only averaged data, and not individual animals’ activity patterns. In the present study, wheel‐running activity rhythms were monitored from individual BALB/c mice during long‐term exposure to constant red light All mice displayed dramatic lability of circadian activity rhythms, characterized by spontaneous alterations in both free‐running period and rhythm coherence. These results suggest that the circadian system in this strain is composed of a population of weakly‐coupled circadian oscillators.  相似文献   

6.
Chronic fatigue is a debilitating disorder with widespread consequences, but effective treatment strategies are lacking. Novel genetic mouse models of fatigue may prove invaluable for studying its underlying physiological mechanisms and for testing treatments and interventions. In a screen of voluntary wheel‐running behavior in N‐ethyl‐N‐nitrosourea mutagenized C57BL/6J mice, we discovered two lines with low body weights and aberrant wheel‐running patterns suggestive of a fatigue phenotype. Affected progeny from these lines had lower daily activity levels and exhibited low amplitude circadian rhythm alterations. Their aberrant behavior was characterized by frequent interruptions and periods of inactivity throughout the dark phase of the light‐dark cycle and increased levels of activity during the rest or light phase. Expression of the behavioral phenotypes in offspring of strategic crosses was consistent with a recessive inheritance pattern. Mapping of phenotypic abnormalities showed linkage with a single locus on chromosome 1, and whole exome sequencing identified a single point mutation in the Slc2a4 gene encoding the GLUT4 insulin‐responsive glucose transporter. The single nucleotide change (A‐T, which we named “twiggy”) was in the distal end of exon 10 and resulted in a premature stop (Y440*). Additional metabolic phenotyping confirmed that these mice recapitulate phenotypes found in GLUT4 knockout mice. However, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a mutation in this gene has been shown to result in extensive changes in general behavioral patterns. These findings suggest that GLUT4 may be involved in circadian behavioral abnormalities and could provide insights into fatigue in humans.  相似文献   

7.
The neuropeptide pigment‐dispersing factor (PDF) is important for the generation and entrainment of circadian rhythms in the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster. Recently two pdf homologs, pdf‐1 and pdf‐2, and a PDF receptor, pdfr‐1, have been found in Caenorhabditis elegans and have been implicated in locomotor activity. In this work, we have studied the role of the PDF neuropeptide in the circadian system of C. elegans and found that both pdf‐1 and pdf‐2 mutants affect the normal locomotor activity outputs. In particular, loss of pdf‐1 induced circadian arrhythmicity under both light–dark (LD) and constant dark (DD) conditions. These defects can be rescued by a genomic copy of the pdf‐1 locus. Our results indicate that PDF‐1 is involved in rhythm generation and in the synchronization to LD cycles, as rhythmic patterns of activity rapidly disappear when pdf‐1 mutants are recorded under both entrained and free‐running conditions. The role of PDF‐2 and the PDF receptors is probably more complex and involves the interaction between the two pdf paralogues found in the nematode.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Running wheels are widely used in studies on biological rhythms. In mice wheel diameters have ranged from 11 cm to 23 cm. We provided mice with running wheels of two different sizes: 15 cm diameter and 11 cm diameter. The amount of running in the 12-h light:12-h dark condition and the endogenous period of wheel running in constant darkness was determined over 40 days. On the 1st day in constant darkness all animals were exposed to a 15-min light pulse at circadian time 13. The animals in the small wheel ran significantly less both in 12 h light: 12 h dark and constant darkness, and showed a longer endogenous period in constant darkness compared to animals in the large wheel. Moreover, after the light pulse at circadian time 13, mice in the small wheel showed a significantly smaller phase delay in running wheel activity than mice in the larger wheels. The data suggest that the magnitude of a photic phase shift depends on the amount and timing of activity the animals display in relation to this stimulus. It can be concluded that technical features of the running wheel can influence the circadian period of wheel running.  相似文献   

10.
Most animals can be categorized as nocturnal, diurnal, or crepuscular. However, rhythms can be quite plastic in some species and vary from one individual to another within a species. In the golden spiny mouse (Acomys russatus), a variety of rhythm patterns have been seen, and these patterns can change considerably as animals are transferred from the field into the laboratory. We previously suggested that these animals may have a circadian time‐keeping system that is fundamentally nocturnal and that diurnal patterns seen in their natural habitat reflect mechanisms operating outside of the basic circadian time‐keeping system (i.e., masking). In the current study, we further characterized plasticity evident in the daily rhythms of golden spiny mice by measuring effects of lighting conditions and access to a running wheel on rhythms in general activity (GA) and body temperature (Tb). Before the wheel was introduced, most animals were active mainly during the night, though there was considerable inter‐individual variability and patterns were quite plastic. The introduction of the wheel caused an increase in the level of nighttime activity and Tb in most individuals. The periods of the rhythms in constant darkness (DD) were very similar, and even slightly longer in this study (24.1±0.2 h) than in an earlier one in which animals had not been provided with running wheels. We found no correlation between the distance animals ran in their wheels and the period of their rhythms in DD. Re‐entrainment after phase delays of the LD cycle occurred more rapidly in the presence than absence of the running wheel. The characteristics of the rhythms of golden spiny mice seen in this study may be the product of natural selection favoring plasticity of the circadian system, perhaps reflecting what can happen during an evolutionary transition as animals move from a nocturnal to a diurnal niche.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The nitric oxide (NO) system is involved in the regulation of the cardiovascular system in controlling central and peripheral vascular tone and cardiac functions. It was the aim of this study to investigate in wild‐type C57BL/6 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) knock‐out mice (eNOS‐/‐) the contribution of NO on the circadian rhythms in heart rate (HR), motility (motor activity [MA]), and body temperature (BT) under various environmental conditions. Experiments were performed in 12∶12 h of a light:dark cycle (LD), under free‐run in total darkness (DD), and after a phase delay shift of the LD cycle by ?6 h (i.e., under simulation of a westward time zone transition). All parameters were monitored by radiotelemetry in freely moving mice. In LD, no significant differences in the rhythms of HR and MA were observed between the two strains of mice. BT, however, was significantly lower during the light phase in eNOS‐/‐ mice, resulting in a significantly greater amplitude. The period of the free‐running rhythm in DD was slightly shorter for all variables, though not significant. In general, rhythmicity was greater in eNOS‐/‐ than in C57 mice both in LD and DD. After a delay shift of the LD cycle, HR and BT were resynchronized to the new LD schedule within 5–6 days, and resynchronization of MA occurred within 2–3 days. The results in telemetrically instrumented mice show that complete knock‐out of the endothelial NO system—though expressed in the suprachiasmatic nuclei and in peripheral tissues—did not affect the circadian organization of heart rate and motility. The circadian regulation of the body temperature was slightly affected in eNOS‐/‐ mice.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
There are sex differences in free‐running rhythms, activity level and activity distribution that are attributed, in part, to the action of gonadal hormones. We tested the hypothesis that non‐classical estrogenic signaling pathways at estrogen receptor subtype 1 (ESR1) modify the amplitude and phase of activity. We used ESR1 knock‐out mice (ERKO) and non‐classical estrogen receptor knock‐in mice (NERKI). ERKO animals are unable to respond to estrogen at the ESR1 and NERKI animals lack the ability to respond to estrogens via the estrogen response element‐mediated pathway, but can still respond via non‐classical mechanisms. We compared intact male and female ERKO, NERKI and wildtype (WT) mice with respect to total wheel‐running activity, activity distribution across the 24‐h day, phase angle of activity onset and free‐running period (τ) and the duration of activity in constant conditions. WT females had significantly greater activity than WT males, and this activity was more consolidated to the dark phase of the light:dark cycle. These sex differences were absent in the NERKI and ERKO animals. Among females, NERKI and ERKO animals had greater activity during the light phase than WT counterparts. Additionally, we have identified a novel contribution of non‐classical estrogen signaling pathways on the distribution of activity. Our data suggest that total activity is ESR1‐dependent and daily activity patterns depend on both classical and non‐classical actions of estrogens. These data will aid in identifying the mechanisms underlying sex differences in sleep–wake cycles and the influence of steroid hormones on circadian patterns.  相似文献   

16.
The study employed electrical lesions of dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) to determine the functional significance of those nuclei in the regulation of wheel-running activity rhythm in mice in light/dark (LD 12:12), constant light (LL), and constant dark (DD) conditions. The wheel-running records showed that raphe nucleus lesions resulted in few days' decrease in common activity and amplitude in LD. The activity phase was not compact but in fragmentary form, especially in DD condition. In some animals an earlier onset of activity after DRN lesion in LD was observed. In LL extension of the rhythm period occurred. Destruction of DRN only slightly modulates the wheel-running circadian rhythm in mice.  相似文献   

17.
The locomotor activity rhythm of the media workers of the ant species Camponotus compressus was monitored under constant conditions of the laboratory to understand the role of circadian clocks in social organization. The locomotor activity rhythm of most ants entrained to a 24 h light/dark (12:12 h; LD) cycle and free-ran under constant darkness (DD) with circadian periodicities. Under entrained conditions about 75% of media workers displayed nocturnal activity patterns, and the rest showed diurnal activity patterns. In free-running conditions these ants displayed three types of activity patterns (turn-around). The free-running period (τ) of the locomotor activity rhythm of some ants (10 out of 21) showed period lengthening, and those of a few (6 out of 21) showed period shortening, whereas the locomotor activity rhythm of the rest of the ants (5 out of 21) underwent large phase shifts. Interestingly, the pre-turn-around τ of those ants that showed nocturnal activity patterns during earlier LD entrainment was shorter than 24 h, which became greater than 24 h after 6–9 days of free-run in DD. On the other hand, the pre-turn-around τ of those ants, which exhibited diurnal patterns during earlier LD entrainment, was greater than 24 h, which became shorter than 24 h after 6–9 days of free-run in DD. The patterns of activity under LD cycles and the turn-around of activity patterns in DD regime suggest that these ants are shift workers in their respective colonies, and they probably use their circadian clocks for this purpose. Circadian plasticity thus appears to be a general strategy of the media workers of the ant species C. compressus to cope with the challenges arising due to their roles in the colony constantly exposed to a fluctuating environment.  相似文献   

18.
The locomotor activity rhythm of the media workers of the ant species Camponotus compressus was monitored under constant conditions of the laboratory to understand the role of circadian clocks in social organization. The locomotor activity rhythm of most ants entrained to a 24 h light/dark (12:12 h; LD) cycle and free-ran under constant darkness (DD) with circadian periodicities. Under entrained conditions about 75% of media workers displayed nocturnal activity patterns, and the rest showed diurnal activity patterns. In free-running conditions these ants displayed three types of activity patterns (turn-around). The free-running period (τ) of the locomotor activity rhythm of some ants (10 out of 21) showed period lengthening, and those of a few (6 out of 21) showed period shortening, whereas the locomotor activity rhythm of the rest of the ants (5 out of 21) underwent large phase shifts. Interestingly, the pre-turn-around τ of those ants that showed nocturnal activity patterns during earlier LD entrainment was shorter than 24 h, which became greater than 24 h after 6-9 days of free-run in DD. On the other hand, the pre-turn-around τ of those ants, which exhibited diurnal patterns during earlier LD entrainment, was greater than 24 h, which became shorter than 24 h after 6-9 days of free-run in DD. The patterns of activity under LD cycles and the turn-around of activity patterns in DD regime suggest that these ants are shift workers in their respective colonies, and they probably use their circadian clocks for this purpose. Circadian plasticity thus appears to be a general strategy of the media workers of the ant species C. compressus to cope with the challenges arising due to their roles in the colony constantly exposed to a fluctuating environment.  相似文献   

19.
In previous experiments, we found that rats raised in constant light (LL) manifested a more robust circadian rhythm of motor activity in LL and showed longer phase shifts after a light pulse in constant darkness (DD) than those raised under constant darkness. In addition, we observed that the effects produced by constant light differed depending on the time of postnatal development in which it was given. These results suggest that both sensitivity to light and the functioning of the circadian pacemaker of the rat could be affected by the environmental conditions experienced during postembryonic development. Thus, the present experiment aimed to study whether postnatal exposure to light could also affect the circadian system of the mouse. Three groups of mice were formed: One group was raised under constant darkness during lactation (DD group), the second under constant light (LL group), and the third under light-dark cycles (LD group). After lactation, the three groups were submitted first to constant light of high intensity, then to LD cycles, and finally to constant darkness. In the DD stage, a light pulse was given. Finally, mice were submitted to constant light of low intensity. We observed that the circadian rhythm of the DD group was more disturbed under constant light than the rhythm of the LL group, and that, when light intensity increased, the period of the rhythm of the DD group lengthened more than that of the LL group. No significant differences among the groups were found in the phase shift induced by the light pulse. Therefore, it appears that DD mice are more sensitive to light than their LL counterparts. However, at present there is no evidence to affirm that the light environment experienced by the mouse during postnatal development affects the circadian pacemaker. (Chronobiology International, 18(4), 683-696, 2001)  相似文献   

20.
In previous experiments, we found that rats raised in constant light (LL) manifested a more robust circadian rhythm of motor activity in LL and showed longer phase shifts after a light pulse in constant darkness (DD) than those raised under constant darkness. In addition, we observed that the effects produced by constant light differed depending on the time of postnatal development in which it was given. These results suggest that both sensitivity to light and the functioning of the circadian pacemaker of the rat could be affected by the environmental conditions experienced during postembryonic development. Thus, the present experiment aimed to study whether postnatal exposure to light could also affect the circadian system of the mouse. Three groups of mice were formed: One group was raised under constant darkness during lactation (DD group), the second under constant light (LL group), and the third under light-dark cycles (LD group). After lactation, the three groups were submitted first to constant light of high intensity, then to LD cycles, and finally to constant darkness. In the DD stage, a light pulse was given. Finally, mice were submitted to constant light of low intensity. We observed that the circadian rhythm of the DD group was more disturbed under constant light than the rhythm of the LL group, and that, when light intensity increased, the period of the rhythm of the DD group lengthened more than that of the LL group. No significant differences among the groups were found in the phase shift induced by the light pulse. Therefore, it appears that DD mice are more sensitive to light than their LL counterparts. However, at present there is no evidence to affirm that the light environment experienced by the mouse during postnatal development affects the circadian pacemaker. (Chronobiology International, 18(4), 683–696, 2001)  相似文献   

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