多重振荡是小鼠生理食物预期的基础

Q2 Medicine
David E. Ehichioya , Ishrat Masud , S.K. Tahajjul Taufique , Melody Shen , Sofia Farah , Shin Yamazaki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

昼夜节律起搏器协调行为和生理节律,使生物体能够预测每天重复发生的环境事件,如明暗、温度变化和食物供应。当夜间活动的啮齿动物在白天受到时间限制的喂养时,它们通常在吃饭前几个小时表现出食物预期活动。在释放小鼠自由进食时,这种预期活动立即被取消,但在食物剥夺后,大约在同一时间重新出现。然而,啮齿动物在自由取食期间保持食物可得性的时间记忆的机制仍然难以捉摸。我们使用开源的喂养实验装置3 (FED3)来测量寻找食物的戳鼻子行为。我们对FED3进行了编程,让它通过左戳而不是右戳来分配颗粒。在白天限制进食时,小鼠在白天进食前几小时,在有奖励的左戳和没有奖励的右戳中,都表现出强烈的预期性鼻子戳。此外,小鼠在夜间也表现出有奖励和无奖励的刺激,这与小鼠以前的习惯性进食时间一致。在随意进食之后,受到奖励的白天戳鼻子逐渐回到习惯的夜间。然而,在食物剥夺之后,预期的戳戳立即在白天和晚上再次出现,与之前白天限制喂食和夜间习惯性喂食的时间一致。在随意喂养的情况下,db/db小鼠在食物摄入方面没有明显的每日节律。然而,这些小鼠在戳鼻子和白天限制进食的活动中都表现出强烈的食物预期。在恢复自由进食后,db/db小鼠在白天和晚上偶尔戳戳,在食物剥夺后,预期迅速重新出现。这些数据表明,在食物预期的基础上至少有两个振子:一个振子的相位根据食物的可用性而变化,另一个振子的相位不受喂养条件的影响。在db/db小鼠中,第一个振荡器可能受损,第二个振荡器未受影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multiple oscillators underlie circadian food anticipation in mice
Circadian pacemakers orchestrate behavioral and physiological rhythms, enabling organisms to anticipate daily reoccurring environmental events such as light and dark, temperature changes, and food availability. When nocturnal rodents are subjected to time-restricted feeding during the day, they typically display food anticipatory activity several hours before mealtime. Upon releasing mice to ad libitum feeding, this anticipatory activity is abolished immediately but, following food deprivation, reappears at approximately the same time. However, the mechanism by which rodents retain this time memory of food availability during ad libitum feeding has remained elusive. We utilized the open-source Feeding Experimentation Device 3 (FED3) to measure food-seeking nose-poking behavior. We programmed the FED3 to dispense a pellet by a single left nose-poke, but not by right poke. During daytime restricted feeding, mice exhibited strong anticipatory nose-poking a few hours prior to the daytime meal in both rewarded left and unrewarded right pokes. In addition, mice also exhibited elevation of both rewarded and unrewarded pokes at night, coinciding with mice's previous habitual feeding time. Following ad libitum feeding, rewarded daytime nose-poking gradually moved back to habitual nighttime. However, following food deprivation, anticipatory poking immediately reappeared during the day and night, coinciding with the times of previous daytime restricted feeding and nighttime habitual feeding. Under ad libitum feeding, db/db mice didn't exhibit a clear daily rhythm in food intake. However, these mice exhibited robust food anticipation in both nose-pokes and activity during daytime restricted feeding. Following release back to ad libitum feeding, db/db mice poked sporadically during the day and night, and following food deprivation, anticipation promptly reappeared. These data suggest that there are at least two oscillators underlying food anticipation: one oscillator with a phase that changes according to food availability, and another oscillator with a phase unaffected by feeding conditions. In db/db mice, the first oscillator is likely impaired, and the second oscillator is unaffected.
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来源期刊
Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms
Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms Neuroscience-Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
69 days
期刊介绍: Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms is a multidisciplinary journal for the publication of original research and review articles on basic and translational research into sleep and circadian rhythms. The journal focuses on topics covering the mechanisms of sleep/wake and circadian regulation from molecular to systems level, and on the functional consequences of sleep and circadian disruption. A key aim of the journal is the translation of basic research findings to understand and treat sleep and circadian disorders. Topics include, but are not limited to: Basic and translational research, Molecular mechanisms, Genetics and epigenetics, Inflammation and immunology, Memory and learning, Neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, Neuropsychopharmacology and neuroendocrinology, Behavioral sleep and circadian disorders, Shiftwork, Social jetlag.
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