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Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, University of California, Davis, California 95616-8519
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ABSTRACT |
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Circadian
rhythms of activity (Act) and body temperature
(Tb) were recorded from male
Syrian hamsters under square-wave
(LDSq) and simulated natural
(LDSN, with dawn and dusk
transitions) light-dark cycles. Light intensity and data sampling were
under the synchronized control of a laboratory computer. Changes in
reactive and predictive onsets and offsets for the circadian rhythms of
Act and Tb were examined in both
lighting conditions. The reactive Act onset occurred 1.1 h earlier
(P < 0.01) in
LDSN than in
LDSq and had a longer
-period
(1.7 h; P < 0.05). The reactive
Tb onset was 0.7 h earlier (P < 0.01) in
LDSN. In
LDSN, the predictive Act onset
advanced by 0.3 h (P < 0.05),
whereas the Tb predictive onset
remained the same as in LDSq. The
phase angle difference between Act and Tb predictive onsets decreased by
0.9 h (P < 0.05) in
LDSN, but the offsets of both
measures remained unchanged. In this study, animals exhibited different
circadian entrainment characteristics under
LDSq and
LDSN, suggesting that gradual and
abrupt transitions between light and dark may provide different
temporal cues.
light-emitting diode; masking; activity; body temperature; dawn; dusk
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE NATURAL light-dark (LD) cycle is the most important environmental temporal cue for entraining circadian rhythms (16). A characteristic feature of the natural LD cycle is the gradual change in light intensity during dawn and dusk. Many animals begin or cease locomotor activity during these twilight periods. Dawn and dusk may be a part of the photic zeitgeber that contains important temporal information responsible for entrainment. However, relatively few studies examine the role of these transitional phases on photic entrainment (2, 9, 10, 13, 14, 19, 20).
Previous studies have demonstrated that simulated twilight periods alter the characteristics of entrained circadian rhythms compared with those produced by LD cycles without twilight transitions [square-wave LD cycles (LDSq)]. When deer mice in a 16:8-h LD cycle were transferred to an 8:8-h LD cycle, most animals failed to entrain to the new LD cycle (9). However, after simulated dawn and dusk transitions were added to the 8:8-h LD regimen, animals became entrained; adding artificial dawn and dusk transitions expanded the range of entrainment. Similarly, Boulos et al. (2) demonstrated that animals entrained to a 26-h LD cycle if it included twilight transitions; the same LD cycle without transitions failed to synchronize most animals. Boulos et al. (2) suggested that the inclusion of twilight transitions increased the strength of the LD zeitgeber. In addition, hamsters exposed to dawn, dusk, and square-wave light pulses exhibited different phase-response curves (3).
The phase angle between rhythms has also been examined in LD cycles that include twilight periods. Laakso et al. (14) examined the temporal patterns of melatonin secretion and locomotor activity in such LD cycles. In abrupt on-off LD cycles, melatonin levels reached a peak 4 h before lights on. In contrast, under LD cycles with gradual light on-off transitions, there was an elevated mean level of melatonin, and the peak level was phase delayed by 2 h. However, the phase angle between peaks of locomotor activity and melatonin level remained the same under both conditions.
This study was designed to further test the hypothesis that animals exhibit different circadian rhythm characteristics in a simulated natural light-dark cycle (LDSN) than in an LDSq with the same photoperiod. Both activity (Act) and body temperature (Tb) were simultaneously recorded to allow us to compare responses of these two circadian rhythms.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Animals. Thirteen adult (160-180 g) male Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus; Simonsen Laboratories, Gilroy, CA) were provided water and food ad libitum. They were housed in individual cages (16 × 7.5 × 8 in.) within ventilated, light-tight enclosures (22.5 × 22.5 × 16 in.) at an ambient temperature of 25 ± 0.5°C. The animals were isolated from each other to prevent the transfer of social cues. Cages were changed weekly and animal health was checked daily. This study was conducted between mid-April and mid-July. All surgical and animal care procedures were performed according to the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
Lighting system. The light source
consisted of 40 light-emitting diodes (LED; Digi-Key, Thief River
Falls, MN) in a 5 × 8 array format located in the
center of each enclosure ceiling. The peak emission wavelength of each
LED was 565 nm. Maximum intensity output of each 5 × 8 array was
0.05 µmol
photons · (m2)
1 · s
1 (3.0 × 1012
photons · (cm1)
1 · s
1)
measured at the bottom of the animal cage (10 in. below LED array). The
linearity of intensity output of each LED matrix was measured using a
spectrophotometer. A representative series of LED spectral profiles
with increasing intensities (Fig.
1A)
shows that the spectral profile was the same for each LED output
intensity. Light intensity changed linearly across time (Fig.
1B).
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The two lighting profiles used in this study were an
LDSq (Fig.
1C) and an
LDSN (Fig.
1D). For the
LDSq, LEDs were abruptly turned on
to maximum intensity for a 14-h light period and then abruptly turned
off for a 10-h dark period. The
LDSN also had a 14-h light period
followed by a 10-h dark period in a 24-h cycle. However, the 14-h light
period consisted of a 4-h dawn-mimicking period followed by a 6-h
constant maximum intensity period and concluded with a 4-h period
mimicking dusk. For the 4-h dawn and dusk periods of the
LDSN, the light intensity of the
LED arrays was linearly changed between zero and maximum output in 256 steps, 59.25 s/step. Light intensity increased by 1.2 × 1010
photons · (cm2)
1 · s
1
at each step. Because the threshold irradiance to induce statistically significant phase response in hamsters is 7.4 × 1010
photons · (cm2)
1 · s
1
(17), the light intensity [3.0 × 1012
photons · (cm2)
1 · s
1]
of the light period in LDSq was
above this threshold, thus ensuring that each animal received a 14-h
photoperiod in the LDSq profile. On the other hand, during the simulated dawn in
LDSN, light intensity reached
threshold intensity after 7 steps of intensity increase [7 × 1.2 × 1010
photons · (cm2)
1 · s
1 = 8.4 × 1010
photons · (cm2)
1 · s
1], which equals ~7
min. Light intensity dropped bellow threshold 7 min before the dark
period. This gave the animals 13 h and 46 min of effective photoperiod
in the LDSN profile.
Physiologically, we considered this 0.2-h difference in effective
photoperiod between the two lighting conditions insignificant. Thus
these physiologically identical photoperiods provided a constant marker
for comparing the differences resulting from the two different lighting
profiles. The total number of photons provided in
LDSN is 71.4% of that in
LDSq. Twilight transitions in
LDSN provided 29.2% fewer photons.
The light intensity and light profile were controlled by a computer using software developed for this study. Because the LED output intensity was proportional to the applied current (Fig. 1A), this current was used to monitor the lighting regimens throughout the entire experiment. The current controlling output intensity was converted into a corresponding frequency by a voltage-current converter. This frequency was continuously recorded in parallel with the animal biotelemetry data. Period analysis of both lighting profiles demonstrated a 24-h period, and the variance ratio of both profiles was 1.0, indicating that a stable light cycle was provided to the animals throughout the study.
Biotelemetry. Animals were implanted intraperitoneally with a biotelemetry transmitter (VM-FH disc; Minimitter, Sunriver, OR) to monitor core Tb and ambulatory Act. For surgery, the animals were anesthetized with 3% isoflurane in pure medical-grade oxygen, administered using an adjustable isoflurane vaporizer (Viking Medical Products, Medford Lakes, NJ). To prevent hypothermia, all surgical procedures were carried out on a heating pad. Animals were transferred back to their housing enclosure and allowed 7-10 days to recover from surgery.
After recovery, animals were exposed first to LDSq for 6 wk and then to LDSN for another 6 wk. Tb and Act were recorded at 5-min intervals throughout this study. The first 2 wk of each light exposure were considered an adaptive period, and these data were not analyzed.
Data analysis. Period analysis, based on the periodogram method developed by Enright (5), was first performed on all data to verify that all animals exhibited stable entrainment. Average 24-h waveforms (eductions) were generated from each animal to determine the daily onsets and offsets of Act and Tb. The predictive and reactive measures denoted in this study are equivalent to the concept of predictive and reactive homeostasis characterized by Moore-Ede (15). In this study, the intersections of the eduction curve with the daily mean level were denoted reactive onset and offset. In addition, the times of anticipatory Act and Tb (predictive onset and offset) were analyzed. Methods of determining these parameters are described below. Measured reactive and predictive onsets and offsets were then used to determine the relative phase change of each circadian rhythm in LDSq and LDSN.
Reactive onset and offset. The
reactive measures were defined to evaluate the circadian changes after
the light-dark transitions. The reactive measures of Act onset and
offset and Tb onset and offset
were determined using the daily mean crossing as a threshold for the
wave eduction plot of each animal. The reactive onset time for Act
(ActR1) and
Tb
(TbR1) was identified as the
first point above the mean level that remained above the mean for more than three points (15 min) in a 1-h period (Fig.
2). The reactive circadian offset time for
Act (ActR2) and
Tb
(TbR2) was identified as the
last point before the eduction value dropped below the daily mean
(Fig. 2). Sporadic short activity bursts that lasted <15
min (3 data points) were ignored.
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The active period (
) for reactive measures was calculated for each
animal as the interval between the
ActR1 and
ActR2
(
R). The phase
angle difference (
) between
ActR1 and
TbR1 was defined as the time
interval between ActR1 and
TbR1
(
R1). The 
between ActR2 and
TbR2 was defined as the time
interval between ActR2 and
TbR2
(
R2). The circadian
amplitude was calculated using a cosinor algorithm (7, 8).
Predictive onset and offset. The predictive measures were defined to evaluate circadian changes preceding and anticipatory to light-dark transitions. The predictive Act onset and offset and Tb onset and offset were a direct visual determination of Act and Tb changes from the wave eduction plot of each animal. The Act predictive onset time (ActP1; Fig. 2) was determined by retrospectively tracing the plot curve to identify when an animal initially became active. The predictive offset time (ActP2, Fig. 2) was the point before an Act eduction curve started to fall below the daily mean. The same technique was applied to determine the Tb onset (TbP1) and offset (TbP2).
The
for predictive measures
(
P) was calculated as the
interval between the ActP1 and
ActP2. The 
between
ActP1 and
TbP1 was defined as the time
interval between ActP1 and
TbP1
(
P1). The 
between
ActP2 and
TbP2 was defined as the time
interval between ActP2 and
TbP2
(
P2). The period of
anticipatory Act onset was defined as the time between
ActP1 and
ActR1. The period of anticipatory
Tb onset was the difference
between TbP1 and
TbR1. The time intervals between
ActP2 and
ActR2 and between
TbP2 and TbR2 were calculated as
anticipatory offsets.
Statistical Analysis. Parameters describing Act and Tb rhythms were compared by the use of the paired t-test. Differences were considered significant at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Animals in this study entrained to both the
LDSq and
LDSN cycles. However, the variance
ratio was higher under LDSq than
under LDSN (Fig.
3A). The
difference between the average variance ratio of Act in
LDSq (0.30 ± 0.02)
and in LDSN (0.20 ± 0.02) was
significant (t = 5.98, df = 12, P < 0.01). This was also true for
Tb (0.55 ± 0.02 and 0.44 ± 0.02 for LDSq and
LDSN, respectively;
t = 5.22, df = 12, P < 0.01). The circadian amplitudes
(Fig. 3B) of Act and
Tb were 38 ± 8 counts and 0.56 ± 0.02°C, respectively, in LDSq. In
LDSN, Act and
Tb were 22 ± 4 counts and 0.42 ± 0.02°C, respectively. Animals exposed to
LDSq exhibited significantly higher circadian amplitudes of daily Act
(t = 3.77, df = 12, P < 0.01) and
Tb
(t = 5.85, df = 12, P < 0.01) than those exposed to
LDSN.
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Reactive onsets and offsets and associated
measures. For reactive measures (Fig.
4A),
average ActR1 occurred at
zeitgeber time (ZT) 13.1 ± 0.2 and 12.0 ± 0.3 in
LDSq and
LDSN, respectively. This 1.1-h
circadian ActR1 advance from
LDSq to
LDSN was significant (t = 7.29, df = 12, P < 0.01).
ActR2 times, which occurred at ZT
23.1 ± 0.2 and 23.6 ± 0.3 in
LDSq and
LDSN, respectively, showed no
significant difference between lighting conditions.
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Mean circadian TbR1 was at ZT 12.1 ± 0.2 and 11.4 ± 0.2 in
LDSq and
LDSN, respectively (Fig.
4A). The 0.7-h advance from
LDSq to
LDSN was significant
(t = 3.58, df = 12, P < 0.01). Mean
TbR2 was at ZT 23.4 ± 0.2 and
24.0 ± 0.3 in LDSq and
LDSN, respectively. TbR2 was significantly delayed by
0.6 h in LDSN
(t =
2.27, df = 12, P < 0.05). The average

R1 in
LDSq (1.0 ± 0.2 h) was not significantly different from that in
LDSN (0.6 ± 0.2 h; Fig.
5A). The

R2 in
LDSq (
0.3 ± 0.1 h) also
did not differ significantly from that in
LDSN (
0.4 ± 0.1 h). The
average
R (Fig.
5B) was 9.9 ± 0.3 and 11.6 ± 0.5 h in LDSq and
LDSN, respectively. The
R was significantly lengthened
from LDSq to
LDSN by 1.7 h
(t =
2.63, df = 12, P < 0.05).
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Predictive onsets and associated measures. Using predictive measures, average ActP1 occurred at ZT 11.7 ± 0.2 and 11.4 ± 0.2 in LDSq and LDSN, respectively (Fig. 4B). ActP1 showed a significant advance of 0.3 h from LDSq to LDSN (t = 2.42, df = 12, P < 0.05). ActP2 occurred at ZT 22.6 ± 0.3 and 23.2 ± 0.3 in LDSq and LDSN, respectively. ActP2 showed no significant difference between lighting conditions.
Mean circadian TbP1 was at ZT 9.7 ± 0.3 and 10.3 ± 0.2 in
LDSq and
LDSN, respectively (Fig.
4B).
TbP1 showed no significant difference between LDSq and
LDSN.
TbP2 was at ZT 22.9 ± 0.3 and 23.5 ± 0.3 in LDSq and
LDSN, respectively.
TbP2 was significantly delayed by
0.6 h in LDSN
(t =
2.30, df = 12, P < 0.05). The average 
P1 was 2.0 ± 0.4 h in
LDSq and significantly decreased
to 1.1 ± 0.1 h in LDSN (Fig.
5A; t = 2.13, df = 12, P < 0.05). The

P2 in
LDSq (
0.2 ± 0.03 h) did
not differ from that in LDSN (0.3 ± 0.01 h). The average
P
(Fig. 5B) was 10.9 ± 0.3 and
11.9 ± 0.4 h in LDSq and
LDSN, respectively. The
P was significantly lengthened
from LDSq to
LDSN by 1.0 h
(t =
4.32, df = 12, P < 0.01).
Anticipatory behavior. Animals exposed
to LDSq typically exhibited an
anticipatory Act onset (ActP1
ActR1). Such intervals are shown as shaded areas in Fig.
6A. The
length of this anticipatory activity shortened under
LDSN (Fig.
6B), completely disappearing in some
animals. The duration of the mean anticipatory activity significantly
decreased from 1.4 ± 0.2 to 0.6 ± 0.2 h in
LDSq and
LDSN, respectively (Fig.
7; t = 6.69, df = 12, P < 0.01).
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An anticipatory rise in Tb also occurred before and during the corresponding anticipatory Act, as shown in the shaded area between TbP1 and TbR1 (Fig. 6A). The mean duration of anticipatory Tb in LDSq decreased significantly in LDSN, from 2.4 ± 0.3 to 1.1 ± 0.1 h, respectively (Fig. 7; t = 3.29, df = 12, P < 0.01). The Tb maximum generally appeared ~5 min after the corresponding peak of Act (Fig. 6), although the rise of Tb started earlier than the increase of Act. Act and Tb also showed different onset slopes. Generally, the slope of anticipatory Tb was shallower than that of anticipatory Act. However, after Act reached its first peak, changes in Tb tended to parallel Act, as shown in Fig. 6. The average anticipatory offsets of both Act and Tb were similar and showed no differences in either LD cycle (Fig. 7). The anticipatory offset of Act was 0.4 ± 0.2 and 0.4 ± 0.1 h in LDSq and LDSN, respectively. The anticipatory offset of Tb was 0.5 ± 0.2 and 0.5 ± 0.1 h in LDSq and LDSN, respectively.
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DISCUSSION |
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This study demonstrates that animals exhibit different circadian
characteristics when exposed to 24-h LD cycles that vary in the rate of
their LD transitions. In LDSN,
both ActR1 and
ActR2 were phase advanced compared
with those in LDSq.
TbR1 was also advanced; however,
TbP1 did not change between
lighting conditions. The Act offsets remained unchanged between
lighting conditions, whereas the
Tb offsets were
slightly delayed in LDSN. The

R1 was not affected by the
different LD cycles; however, the

P1 was shortened in
LDSN. In addition, the 
between reactive and predictive offsets, including the reversed phase
relationship to the onset measures, remained unchanged in either
lighting environment. A longer active period of the
circadian activity rhythm was exhibited in
LDSN. The anticipatory Act and
Tb onsets were shortened in LDSN. Most of the changes in the
circadian parameters between LDSq
and LDSN (i.e., onset 
,
increased active period, and decreased anticipatory interval) occurred
during the circadian onset.
In most circadian studies, when light is used as the zeitgeber to entrain animals, the transition between light and dark is abrupt. However, studies by Kavanau and colleagues (9, 10, 13) have shown that a gradual transition between the light and dark periods not only facilitates reentrainment to a new LD cycle but also increases the range of entrainment. As a result of these studies, it has been suggested that twilight periods contain important photic temporal information that allows animals to maintain their synchrony with the rhythmically changing environment (2, 9, 10, 13, 14, 19, 20). In addition, results using simulated burrow system studies revealed that Syrian hamsters and flying squirrels maintained in an LDSq were exposed to relatively small amounts of light per day (4, 18). DeCoursey (4) further suggested that phase shifts occurred at circadian Act onset during the light-to-dark transition. Because brief light exposures during the day were not considered to have a phase-shifting effect, and animals ceased Act before the beginning of the light period, it was hypothesized that the transition from light to dark may have occurred when the circadian clock was reset daily.
Anticipatory Act and Tb in LDSq and LDSN. This study demonstrates that the animal's Act in LDSq rose above the daily mean ~1 h before the onset of dark. This manifests as a significant amount of anticipatory behavior. Peak Act did not occur until after the onset of dark. These results are consistent with light-sampling behavior reported in other studies on nocturnal rodents (4) and with activity rhythms of animals in a simulated burrow system (18). Observations from flying squirrels housed in a simulated den showed a vigorous preening activity lasting ~1 h before their departure from the simulated den (4). The anticipatory behavior, as seen in this study, is internally driven by the circadian pacemaker.
Alternatively, when animals were exposed to LDSN, the anticipatory Act was significantly attenuated. In some animals, anticipatory Act could not be detected. Kavanau (10) has also observed that white-footed mice housed in LDSq cycles warm up to full Act gradually, over a 1- to 3-h period. However, if a dusk period is provided, animals display a burst of high Act in 5-15 min. Shortening of the anticipatory interval could arise as a result of one or more mechanisms. First, the presence of additional temporal cues during the simulated dusk period may make the anticipatory Act unnecessary. Second, LDSq may produce a stronger masking effect than LDSN. In this case, anticipatory Act could be viewed as the result of a light-induced negative masking effect (inhibition) on Act in nocturnal animals. Dawn and dusk transitions may remove such light masking.
Tb also exhibited a significant shortening of the anticipatory rise between LDSq and LDSN. Decrease of anticipatory Tb was mainly a result of the advance of TbR1. TbP1 was unaffected by the two different lighting conditions, which is in contrast to the onset of ActP1.
Examination of the anticipatory behavior during circadian offsets shows an almost identical phase relationship between predictive and reactive offsets for Act and Tb in both lighting conditions. This suggests that neither Act nor Tb anticipates the light transition during dawn. In addition, the fact that neither ActP2 nor ActR2 showed difference between the two lighting environments suggests that the circadian timing system could be relatively insensitive to light changes during the dark-to-light transition. It is reasonable to hypothesize that the circadian timing system of hamsters is relatively insensitive to light changes during dawn. We can further suggest that the light changes during dusk and the consequential changes in the circadian onsets are more important for daily resetting of the circadian pacemaker.
Circadian activity in LDSq and LDSN. In addition to attenuation of the anticipatory measures, our results demonstrate that animals exhibited an earlier Act onset and Tb rise under LDSN. It is possible that during the gradual change in light intensity, a threshold is reached at which circadian changes are initiated, resulting in the phase shift in Act onset and Tb rise. Usui et al. (19, 20) reported that rats exposed to non-square-wave LD cycles initiated circadian activity at a specific light intensity. Moreover, their results suggested that animals have the ability to sense the direction of the light intensity change. For example, in an ascending saw-tooth waveform, the gradual intensity increase was followed by a brief dark pulse. The animal would remain active until the light intensity reached a particular level, and then the activity would abruptly cease. Later, animals initiated circadian Act at the same light intensity level when exposed to a descending saw-tooth waveform. The studies of Kavanau and colleague (11-13) used a twilight zeitgeber to study the illuminance preferences of nocturnal animals, including rodents and primates, and showed that the animals were most active at a specific illuminance level and could detect light changes during twilight periods. Kavanau and Peters (13) raised the possibility of a shift between photopic and scotopic vision during twilight periods that triggers physiological changes. These physiological changes may then result in circadian behavioral changes.
Another possibility is that an integration of photic properties, such as duration and intensity, provides the critical photic signal for entrainment. In a study by Nelson and Takahashi (17), hamsters were most sensitive to photic stimulation of longer duration, with 5 min being the minimum. It is reasonable to hypothesize that the circadian pacemaker, after reaching its photic threshold, integrates photic information during its light-sensitive period and uses this information to initiate circadian onset but is rather insensitive to any brief light intensity fluctuations. Such underlying mechanisms could result in stable and relatively precise circadian onsets in an LDSN environment.
In this study, hamsters expressed a longer active period and reduced circadian amplitude when exposed to LDSN. At the LD transition, there was a higher maximum Act level in LDSq, which may have been a result of the sudden release from the masking effect of light. The core Tb had already risen to the subjective night level during the Tb anticipatory interval, fully supporting the animal's Act burst. Alternatively, this circadian pattern may result from the absence of temporal cues before the rapid light-to-dark transition, resulting in the animal's heightened anticipation of the onset of dark. Once the LDSq dark period began, the animals displayed vigorous locomotor activity. The gradual intensity changes during the dusk-mimicking period in LDSN could provide additional temporal information, allowing gradual initiation of circadian activity without such anticipation and expenditure of anticipatory metabolic energy.
Interactive relationship between Act and Tb in LDSq and LDSN. In both lighting conditions used in this study, Tb rise always preceded Act onset. Fuller et al. (6) reported that the squirrel monkey produced an anticipatory rise in core Tb by increasing metabolic heat production and reducing peripheral heat loss before dawn. In humans, as reported by Aschoff et al. (1), Tb started to rise ~3 h before waking. In both studies core Tb rise occurred before light onset in LDSq. These observations are consistent with our data and suggest that the daily rise in Tb is regulated by the circadian pacemaker and not a result of either the daily onset of locomotor activity or the LD transition.
Difference in photic information between LDSq and LDSN. The analysis of the variance ratio in our study demonstrates differences in the stability of the circadian rhythm waveforms between LDSq and LDSN, further suggesting that these two lighting conditions may have provided different photic information. Although light is accepted as the most potent zeitgeber for entrainment, the masking effect of light itself cannot be excluded when evaluating LD effects on the circadian rhythms. However, the dim light intensity used in this study should have minimized the role of any responses attributable to masking. If masking does play a role in affecting photic entrainment, the difference in variance ratio could imply that the animals expressed stronger masking effects in LDSq because of the abrupt changes during LD transitions. In contrast, when LDSN was provided, the masking effect was not as dominant because of the gradual LD transitions. We postulate that the gradual LD transition may have provided other temporal cues, resulting in changes in circadian rhythms. The lack of or lessened masking effect could explain why animals exhibited an earlier and abrupt circadian onset of activity.
In conclusion, this study shows that the LDSN can effectively entrain animals and that animals express different entrainment patterns under LDSN than under LDSq. Because the lighting conditions in LDSN are more similar to that of the natural habitat, these different photic entrainment characteristics may more precisely resemble the profiles of photic entrainment in the natural environment. The circadian activity rhythm is responsive to light intensity changes as well as lighting profile (LDSq vs. LDSN). However, Tb is less sensitive to light intensity and profile than to the duration of light (or dark) period. In the nocturnal hamster, the circadian pacemaker seems to be more sensitive to light changes during dusk and relatively insensitive to light during dawn, suggesting that the daily resetting occurs at dusk during circadian onset.
Perspectives
Most circadian studies that have examined the effect of light pulses, hormones, drugs, or lesions on circadian rhythms have primarily used an LDSq. However, this study has demonstrated that there are significant differences in many circadian measures when animals are exposed to LD cycles with gradual transitional periods. We would suggest that the photic cues from the LD cycles with gradual transition periods are more representative of the natural environment. Therefore, the results from many laboratory circadian studies that used an LDSq may not be representative of the natural condition. Further, if masking responses contributed significantly to the responses studied in the presence of the relatively low-intensity light, caution will need to be exercised in interpreting the results of laboratory studies using brighter laboratory or animal room lighting.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Dr. John Horowitz and Dr. Tana Hoban-Higgins for critical review and comments during the preparation of this manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This study was supported by National Aeronautics and Space Administration Grant NAGW-4552.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and correspondence: C. A. Fuller, Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, Univ. of California, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616-8519 (E-mail: cafuller{at}ucdavis.edu).
Received 19 March 1998; accepted in final form 1 December 1998.
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