Abstract: | Motor activity is among the non-photic stimuli that act on the internal clock. We have tested the role of motor activity in the circadian pattern of rats under conditions near the lower limits of entrainment, that induce circadian rhythm dissociation. Three groups of 8 rats each were used: a) rats kept individually in 25×25×15 cm cages, b) rats in 50×25×15 cm cages, and c) rats in 50×25×15 cm cages with access to a running wheel. All the rats were kept under light-dark cycles of 22 hours (T22, 11L:11D) for 50 days, after which they were transferred to constant darkness. All the rats without a running wheel showed a motor activity pattern with two statistically significant circadian rhythms in the periodogram of Sokolove and Bushell: one circadian component entrained by the LD cycle, and another free-running. The rats with access to a running wheel showed several patterns: 5 rats showed only one rhythm entrained to the LD cycle, 2 rats showed circadian rhythm dissociation, and 1 showed only a free running rhythm. We believe that the simultaneous manifestation of two circadian components reflects the functional dissociation of the oscillators population that constitutes the circadian pacemaker, of the rat. Physical exercise acts on the pacemaker reinforcing the strongest group of oscillators, which, depending on the structure of the circadian system of the rat, is usually the one entrained to the LD cycle. This study supports the hypothesis that motor activity couples the oscillators that form the circadian system of the rat. |