Forced Desynchronization of Activity Rhythms in a Model of Chronic Jet Lag in Mice


Autoria(s): Casiraghi, Leandro P.; Oda, Gisele Akemi; Chiesa, Juan J.; Friesen, W. Otto; Golombek, Diego A.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

01/11/2013

01/11/2013

2012

Resumo

We studied locomotor activity rhythms of C57/Bl6 mice under a chronic jet lag (CJL) protocol (ChrA(6/2)), which consisted of 6-hour phase advances of the light-dark schedule (LD) every 2 days. Through periodogram analysis, we found 2 components of the activity rhythm: a short-period component (21.01 +/- 0.04 h) that was entrained by the LD schedule and a long-period component (24.68 +/- 0.26 h). We developed a mathematical model comprising 2 coupled circadian oscillators that was tested experimentally with different CJL schedules. Our simulations suggested that under CJL, the system behaves as if it were under a zeitgeber with a period determined by (24 -[phase shift size/days between shifts]). Desynchronization within the system arises according to whether this effective zeitgeber is inside or outside the range of entrainment of the oscillators. In this sense, ChrA(6/2) is interpreted as a (24 - 6/2 = 21 h) zeitgeber, and simulations predicted the behavior of mice under other CJL schedules with an effective 21-hour zeitgeber. Animals studied under an asymmetric T = 21 h zeitgeber (carried out by a 3-hour shortening of every dark phase) showed 2 activity components as observed under ChrA(6/2): an entrained short-period (21.01 +/- 0.03 h) and a long-period component (23.93 +/- 0.31 h). Internal desynchronization was lost when mice were subjected to 9-hour advances every 3 days, a possibility also contemplated by the simulations. Simulations also predicted that desynchronization should be less prevalent under delaying than under advancing CJL. Indeed, most mice subjected to 6-hour delay shifts every 2 days (an effective 27-hour zeitgeber) displayed a single entrained activity component (26.92 +/- 0.11 h). Our results demonstrate that the disruption provoked by CJL schedules is not dependent on the phase-shift magnitude or the frequency of the shifts separately but on the combination of both, through its ratio and additionally on their absolute values. In this study, we present a novel model of forced desynchronization in mice under a specific CJL schedule; in addition, our model provides theoretical tools for the evaluation of circadian disruption under CJL conditions that are currently used in circadian research.

National Science Agency (ANPCyT, Argentina)

National Science Agency (ANPCyT, Argentina)

National Research Council (CONICET, Argentina)

National Research Council (CONICET, Argentina)

National University of Quilmes (Argentina)

National University of Quilmes (Argentina)

FAPESP (Brazil)

FAPESP (Brazil)

FIRCA (NIH, USA)

FIRCA (NIH, USA)

Identificador

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS, THOUSAND OAKS, v. 27, n. 1, supl. 1, Part 1, pp. 59-69, FEB, 2012

0748-7304

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/37194

10.1177/0748730411429447

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0748730411429447

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC

THOUSAND OAKS

Relação

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS

Direitos

closedAccess

Copyright SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC

Palavras-Chave #SHIFT WORK #LOCOMOTOR ACTIVITY RHYTHMS #CIRCADIAN DISRUPTION #ENTRAINMENT #OSCILLATOR MODEL #MATHEMATICAL SIMULATIONS #CHRONIC JET LAG #MOTOR-ACTIVITY RHYTHM #SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEUS #CIRCADIAN CLOCK #ENTRAINMENT #CYCLE #RAT #DISSOCIATION #OSCILLATORS #DISRUPTION #PACEMAKER #BIOLOGY #PHYSIOLOGY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion