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

First Author  Kennaway DJ Year  2003
Journal  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol Volume  284
Issue  5 Pages  R1231-40
PubMed ID  12521925 Mgi Jnum  J:83391
Mgi Id  MGI:2661347 Doi  10.1152/ajpregu.00697.2002
Citation  Kennaway DJ, et al. (2003) Melatonin and activity rhythm responses to light pulses in mice with the Clock mutation. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 284(5):R1231-40
abstractText  Melatonin and wheel-running rhythmicity and the effects of acute and chronic light pulses on these rhythms were studied in Clock(Delta19) mutant mice selectively bred to synthesize melatonin. Homozygous melatonin-proficient Clock(Delta19) mutant mice (Clock(Delta19/Delta19)-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 approximately 1 h and advanced the time of the melatonin peak in the wild-type mice. When the Clock(Delta19/Delta19)-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(Delta19) 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.
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