Monitoring glucocorticoid signaling and circadian clock function with transgenic zebrafish reporter lines

2013 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Benjamin D Weger ◽  
Meltem Weger ◽  
Nicolas Diotel ◽  
Michael Nusser ◽  
Sepand Rastegar ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kajori Lahiri ◽  
Nadine Froehlich ◽  
Andreas Heyd ◽  
Nicholas S. Foulkes ◽  
Daniela Vallone

The circadian clock enables animals to adapt their physiology and behaviour in anticipation of the day-night cycle. Light and temperature represent two key environmental timing cues (zeitgebers) able to reset this mechanism and so maintain its synchronization with the environmental cycle. One key challenge is to unravel how the regulation of the clock by zeitgebers matures during early development. The zebrafish is an ideal model for studying circadian clock ontogeny since the process of development occursex uteroin an optically transparent chorion and many tools are available for genetic analysis. However, the role played by temperature in regulating the clock during zebrafish development is poorly understood. Here, we have established a clock-regulated luciferase reporter transgenic zebrafish line (Tg (−3.1)per1b::luc) to study the effects of temperature on clock entrainment. We reveal that under complete darkness, from an early developmental stage onwards (48 to 72 hpf), exposure to temperature cycles is a prerequisite for the establishment of self-sustaining rhythms ofzfper1b,zfaanat2, andzfirbpexpression and also for circadian cell cycle rhythms. Furthermore, we show that following the 5–9 somite stage, the expression ofzfper1bis regulated by acute temperature shifts.


Pneumologie ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S10-S11
Author(s):  
M Felten ◽  
LG Teixeira Alves ◽  
C Chaput ◽  
E Letsiou ◽  
N Suttorp ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Rowan Hardy ◽  
Aiqing Li ◽  
Shihani Stoner ◽  
Jan Tuckermann ◽  
Markus Seibel ◽  
...  

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