Melatonin and activity rhythm responses to light pulses in mice with the Clock mutation

2003 ◽  
Vol 284 (5) ◽  
pp. R1231-R1240 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Kennaway ◽  
Athena Voultsios ◽  
Tamara J. Varcoe ◽  
Robert W. Moyer

Melatonin and wheel-running rhythmicity and the effects of acute and chronic light pulses on these rhythms were studied in Clock Δ19 mutant mice selectively bred to synthesize melatonin. Homozygous melatonin-proficient Clock Δ19 mutant mice ( Clock Δ19/Δ19 -MEL) produced melatonin rhythmically, with peak production 2 h later than the wild-type controls (i.e., just before lights on). By contrast, the time of onset of wheel-running activity occurred within a 20-min period around lights off, irrespective of the genotype. Melatonin production in the mutants spontaneously decreased within 1 h of the expected time of lights on. On placement of the mice in continuous darkness, the melatonin rhythm persisted, and the peak occurred 2 h later in each cycle over the first two cycles, consistent with the endogenous period of the mutant. This contrasted with the onset of wheel-running activity, which did not shift for several days in constant darkness. A light pulse around the time of expected lights on followed by constant darkness reduced the expected 2-h delay of the melatonin peak of the mutants to ∼1 h and advanced the time of the melatonin peak in the wild-type mice. When the Clock Δ19/Δ19 -MEL mice were maintained in a skeleton photoperiod of daily 15-min light pulses, a higher proportion entrained to the schedule (57%) than melatonin-deficient mutants (9%). These results provide compelling evidence that mice with the Clock Δ19 mutation express essentially normal rhythmicity, albeit with an underlying endogenous period of 26–27 h, and they can be entrained by brief exposure to light. They also raise important questions about the role of Clock in rhythmicity and the usefulness of monitoring behavioral rhythms compared with hormonal rhythms.

1982 ◽  
Vol 242 (3) ◽  
pp. R261-R264 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. W. Cheung ◽  
C. E. McCormack

These experiments were undertaken to determine if the pineal gland is involved in the physiological mechanism by which the rat alters its free-running period (tau) in response to changes in illuminance. Spontaneous wheel-running activity was recorded from pinealectomized or sham-operated female Charles River rats. The tau of running activity was determined in continuous darkness (DD) or in continuous dim light (LL). Pinealectomized rats and sham-operated rats lengthened their tau's to approximately the same extent when shifted from DD to LL and shortened their tau's when shifted back to DD. Continuous melatonin administration via Silastic capsules failed to alter tau of rats kept in dim LL. These results indicate that the pineal is not primarily involved in the mechanism by which the rat alters tau in response to changes in illuminance.


1997 ◽  
Vol 273 (6) ◽  
pp. R1957-R1964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Verónica S. Valentinuzzi ◽  
Kathryn Scarbrough ◽  
Joseph S. Takahashi ◽  
Fred W. Turek

The effects of age on the circadian clock system have been extensively studied, mainly in two rodent species, the laboratory rat and the golden hamster. However, less information is available on how aging alters circadian rhythmicity in a commonly studied rodent animal model, the mouse. Therefore, in the present study we compared the rhythm of wheel-running activity in adult (6–9 mo) and old (19–22 mo) C57BL/6J mice maintained under different lighting conditions for a period of 4 mo. During this period, mice were subjected to phase advances and phase delays of the light-dark (LD) cycle and eventually to constant darkness (DD). In LD (12 h light, 12 h dark), old mice exhibited delayed activity onset relative to light offset and an increase in the variability of activity onset compared with adult mice. After a 4-h phase advance of the LD cycle, old mice took significantly longer to reentrain their activity rhythm when compared with adult animals. Old mice also demonstrated a decline in the number of wheel revolutions per day and a tendency toward a decrease in the length of the active phase. An increase in fragmentation of activity across the 24-h day was obvious in aging animals, with bouts of activity being shorter and longer rest periods intervening between them. No age difference was detected in the maximum intensity of wheel-running activity. In DD, the free-running period was significantly longer in old mice compared with adults. In view of the rapidly expanding importance of the laboratory mouse for molecular and genetic studies of the mammalian nervous system, the present results provide a basis at the phenotypic level to begin to apply genetic methods to the analysis of circadian rhythms and aging in mammals.


2003 ◽  
Vol 285 (5) ◽  
pp. R939-R949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S. Colwell ◽  
Stephan Michel ◽  
Jason Itri ◽  
Williams Rodriguez ◽  
J. Tam ◽  
...  

The related neuropeptides vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI) are expressed at high levels in the neurons of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), but their function in the regulation of circadian rhythms is unknown. To study the role of these peptides on the circadian system in vivo, a new mouse model was developed in which both VIP and PHI genes were disrupted by homologous recombination. In a light-dark cycle, these mice exhibited diurnal rhythms in activity which were largely indistinguishable from wild-type controls. In constant darkness, the VIP/PHI-deficient mice exhibited pronounced abnormalities in their circadian system. The activity patterns started ∼8 h earlier than predicted by the previous light cycle. In addition, lack of VIP/PHI led to a shortened free-running period and a loss of the coherence and precision of the circadian locomotor activity rhythm. In about one-quarter of VIP/PHI mice examined, the wheel-running rhythm became arrhythmic after several weeks in constant darkness. Another striking example of these deficits is seen in the split-activity patterns expressed by the mutant mice when they were exposed to a skeleton photoperiod. In addition, the VIP/PHI-deficient mice exhibited deficits in the response of their circadian system to light. Electrophysiological analysis indicates that VIP enhances inhibitory synaptic transmission within the SCN of wild-type and VIP/PHI-deficient mice. Together, the observations suggest that VIP/PHI peptides are critically involved in both the generation of circadian oscillations as well as the normal synchronization of these rhythms to light.


2009 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
He S. Yang ◽  
Martha H. Vitaterna ◽  
Aaron D. Laposky ◽  
Kazuhiro Shimomura ◽  
Fred W. Turek

There is considerable evidence for a genetic basis underlying individual differences in spontaneous physical activity in humans and animals. Previous publications indicate that the physical activity level and pattern vary among inbred strains of mice and identified a genomic region on chromosome 13 as quantitative trait loci (QTL) for physical activity. To confirm and further characterize the role of chromosome 13 in regulating daily physical activity level and pattern, we conducted a comprehensive phenotypic study in the chromosome 13 substitution strain (CSS-13) in which the individual chromosome 13 from the A/J strain was substituted into an otherwise complete C57BL/6J (B6) genome. The B6 and A/J parental strains exhibited pronounced differences in daily physical activity, sleep-wake structure, circadian period and body weight. Here we report that a single A/J chromosome 13 in the context of a B6 genetic background conferred a profound reduction in both total cage activity and wheel-running activity under a 14:10-h light-dark cycle, as well as in constant darkness, compared with B6 controls. Additionally, CSS-13 mice differed from B6 controls in the diurnal distribution of activity and the day-to-day variability in activity onset. We further performed a linkage analysis and mapped a significant QTL on chromosome 13 regulating the daily wheel running activity level in mice. Taken together, our findings indicate a QTL on chromosome 13 with dramatic and specific effects on daily voluntary physical activity, but not on circadian period, sleep, or other aspects of activity that are different between B6 and A/J strains.


2005 ◽  
Vol 289 (4) ◽  
pp. R998-R1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan J. Chiesa ◽  
Montserrat Anglès-Pujolràs ◽  
Antoni Díez-Noguera ◽  
Trinitat Cambras

Both temporary access to a running wheel and temporary exposure to light systematically influence the phase producing entrainment of the circadian activity rhythm in the golden hamster ( Mesocricetus auratus). However, precise determination of entrainment limits remains methodologically difficult, because such calculations may be influenced by varying experimental paradigms. In this study, effects on the entrainment of the activity pattern during successive light-dark (LD) cycles of stepwise decreasing periods, as well as wheel running activity, were investigated. In particular, the hamster activity rhythm under LD cycles with a period (T) shorter than 22 h was studied, i.e., when the LD cycle itself had been shown to be an insufficiently strong zeitgeber to synchronize activity rhythms. Indeed, it was confirmed that animals without a wheel do not entrain under 11:11-h LD cycles (T = 22 h). Subsequently providing hamsters continuous access to a running wheel established entrainment to T = 22 h. Moreover, this paradigm underwent further reductions of the T period to T = 19.6 h without loss of entrainment. Furthermore, restricting access to the wheel did not result in loss of entrainment, while even entrainment to T = 19 h was observed. To explain this observed shift in the lower entrainment limit, our speculation centers on changes in pacemaker response facilitated by stepwise changes of T spaced very far apart, thus allowing time for adaptation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 248 (3) ◽  
pp. R320-R330 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Richardson ◽  
M. C. Moore-Ede ◽  
C. A. Czeisler ◽  
W. C. Dement

Circadian rhythms of wheel-running activity and polygraphically defined wakefulness, rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep and non-REM (NREM) sleep were continuously observed in ten mice (Mus musculus) under both alternating light-dark (LD 12:12) and continuous darkness (DD) conditions. Sleep-wake state was determined automatically using a computer-based method that allowed continuous recordings of from 60 to 280 days in duration. The sleep-wake state percentages (of the circadian cycle) thus obtained were in substantial agreement with other estimates for this or similar strains and showed no significant difference between LD 12:12 (wake 54.3%, NREM sleep 38.1%, REM sleep 7.6%) and DD (wake 53.1%, NREM sleep 39.9%, REM sleep 7.0%) conditions. All 10 mice exhibited clear circadian rhythms in each of the three states and wheel-running activity under both lighting conditions for the entire duration of observation. Probability functions, computed using stationary sections of data from all 10 mice, showed distinct waveforms for all three states and wheel running. These waveforms were remarkably similar under entrained and free-running conditions. This documentation of sustained circadian rhythmicity in sleep-wake state throughout observations of unprecedented length contradicts the currently common assertion that circadian control of sleep state is weaker than that of activity.


2000 ◽  
Vol 279 (2) ◽  
pp. R586-R590 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilyn J. Duncan ◽  
Anthony W. Deveraux

Aging involves many alterations in circadian rhythms, including a loss of sensitivity to both photic and nonphotic time signals. This study investigated the sensitivity of young and old hamsters to the phase advancing effect of a 6-h dark pulse on the locomotor activity rhythm. Each hamster was tested four times during a period of ∼9 mo; periods of exposure to a 14-h photoperiod were alternated with the periods of exposure to constant light (20–80 lx), during which the dark pulses were administered. There was no significant difference in the phase shifts exhibited by the young (4–10 mo) and old hamsters (19–25 mo) or in the amount of wheel running activity displayed during each dark pulse. However, young hamsters had a significantly greater propensity to exhibit split rhythms immediately after the dark pulses. These results suggest that, although aging does not reduce the sensitivity of the circadian pacemaker to this nonphotic signal, it alters one property of the pacemaker, i.e., the flexibility of the coupling of its component oscillators.


SLEEP ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Deurveilher ◽  
Kristin Robin Ko ◽  
Brock St C Saumure ◽  
George S Robertson ◽  
Benjamin Rusak ◽  
...  

Abstract Sleep and circadian rhythm disruptions commonly occur in individuals with schizophrenia. Stable tubule only polypeptide (STOP) knockout (KO) mice show behavioral impairments resembling symptoms of schizophrenia. We previously reported that STOP KO mice slept less and had more fragmented sleep and waking than wild-type littermates under a light/dark (LD) cycle. Here, we assessed the circadian phenotype of male STOP KO mice by examining wheel-running activity rhythms and EEG/EMG-defined sleep/wake states under both LD and constant darkness (DD) conditions. Wheel-running activity rhythms in KO and wild-type mice were similarly entrained in LD, and had similar free-running periods in DD. The phase delay shift in response to a light pulse given early in the active phase under DD was preserved in KO mice. KO mice had markedly lower activity levels, lower amplitude activity rhythms, less stable activity onsets, and more fragmented activity than wild-type mice in both lighting conditions. KO mice also spent more time awake and less time in rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) and non-REMS (NREMS) in both LD and DD conditions, with the decrease in NREMS concentrated in the active phase. KO mice also showed altered EEG features and higher amplitude rhythms in wake and NREMS (but not REMS) amounts in both lighting conditions, with a longer free-running period in DD, compared to wild-type mice. These results indicate that the STOP null mutation in mice altered the regulation of sleep/wake physiology and activity rhythm expression, but did not grossly disrupt circadian mechanisms.


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (4) ◽  
pp. R1219-R1225 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Scarbrough ◽  
S. Losee-Olson ◽  
E. P. Wallen ◽  
F. W. Turek

Aging affects the regulation of diurnal and circadian rhythmicity. We tested the hypothesis that the age-related difference in the phase angle of entrainment of the locomotor activity rhythm to a light-dark (LD) cycle would be greater under LD 6:18 than LD 14:10. We also analyzed changes in quantitative aspects of wheel-running behavior according to age group. Young (9-wk-old), middle-aged (11- to 12-mo-old), and old (15- to 17-mo-old) male golden hamsters were entrained to a 14:10 LD cycle followed by re-entrainment to a 6:18 LD cycle. Fourteen days after the start of locomotor recording in LD 14:10 and again after 27 days in LD 6:18, the phase of activity onset, the total number of wheel revolutions performed per day, the peak intensity of wheel-running activity, the duration of the active period, and the level of fragmentation of locomotor activity were quantitated. We also studied the temporal distribution of the largest bout of wheel-running activity among the age groups in both photoperiods. Short days induced testicular regression at a similar rate among young, middle-aged, and old hamsters. The data are discussed in terms of the effects of age on overall circadian organization in the seasonally changing environment.


Genetics ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 557-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
M S Dushay ◽  
R J Konopka ◽  
D Orr ◽  
M L Greenacre ◽  
C P Kyriacou ◽  
...  

Abstract Clock is a semidominant X-linked mutation that results in shortening the period of Drosophila melanogaster's free-running locomotor activity rhythm from ca. 24.0 to ca. 22.5 hr. This mutation similarly shortened the phase response curve, determined by resetting activity rhythms with light pulses. Eclosion peaks for Clk cultures were separated by only 22.5 hr instead of the normal 24 hr. Clk was mapped close to, but separable from, another rhythm mutation--period01--by recombination. The estimated distance between these two mutations was short enough to suggest that Clk could be a per allele. If this is the case, the new mutant is unique in that it, unlike other per variants, is associated with essentially normal 1-min courtship song rhythms when Clk is expressed in males. Also, the new rhythm variant could not, in contrast to a short-period per mutation, have its effects on free-running activity rhythms uncovered by deletions. This result, and the lack of coverage of Clk's effects by duplications, suggest that it is not a simple hypomorphic or amorphic mutation.


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