Light and feeding entrainment of the molecular circadian clock in a marine teleost (Sparus aurata)

May 22, 2013Chronobiology international

Light and feeding influence the internal daily clock in a marine fish (Sparus aurata)

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Abstract

Seabream fed at mid-light or random times exhibited a diurnal activity pattern, with over 91% of activity during the day.

  • Feeding time influences the daily rhythms of locomotor activity and clock gene expression in seabream.
  • Fish fed at mid-darkness were primarily nocturnal, exhibiting 89% of their activity at night.
  • Regular feeding cycles resulted in food-anticipatory activity in the seabream, indicating a behavioral response to scheduled feeding.
  • In the brain, clock gene expression peaked near the light-dark transition, showing a phase delay between positive and negative regulatory elements.
  • The liver's clock gene expression patterns were affected by feeding regime, with maximum expression occurring in antiphase depending on mealtime.
  • Under constant conditions, certain clock genes maintained circadian rhythmicity in both brain and liver, suggesting a complex relationship between light and food signals.

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Full Text

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