Data from: Normal Vision Can Compensate for the Loss of the Circadian Clock.
收藏DataONE2015-09-01 更新2024-06-27 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/null
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Circadian clocks are thought to be essential for timing the daily activity of animals and consequently increase fitness. This view was recently challenged for clock-less fruit flies and mice that exhibited astonishingly normal activity rhythms under outdoor conditions. Compensatory mechanisms appear to enable even clock mutants to live a normal life in nature. Here, we show that gradual daily increases/decreases of light in the lab suffice to provoke normally timed sharp morning (M) and evening (E) activity peaks in clock-less flies. We also show that the compound eyes, but not Cryptochrome (CRY), mediate the precise timing of M and E peaks under natural-like conditions, as CRY-less flies do and eyeless flies do not show these sharp peaks independently of a functional clock. Nevertheless, the circadian clock appears critical for anticipating dusk, as well as for inhibiting sharp activity peaks during midnight. Clock-less flies only increase E activity after dusk and not before the beginning of dusk and respond strongly to twilight exposure in the middle of the night. Furthermore, the circadian clock responds to natural-like light-cycles, by slightly broadening Timeless (TIM) abundance in the clock neurons and this effect is mediated by CRY.
创建时间:
2015-09-01



