Environmental entrainment demonstrates natural circadian rhythmicity in the cnidarian Nematostella vectensis
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2019-10-14Author
Tarrant, Ann M.
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Helm, Rebecca R.
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Levy, Oren
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Rivera, Hanny E.
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https://hdl.handle.net/1912/25023As published
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.205393DOI
10.1242/jeb.205393Keyword
Chronobiology; Circadian; Cnidarian; Entrainment; Subtidal; UV radiationAbstract
Considerable advances in chronobiology have been made through controlled laboratory studies, but distinct temporal rhythms can emerge under natural environmental conditions. Lab-reared Nematostella vectensis sea anemones exhibit circadian behavioral and physiological rhythms. Given that these anemones inhabit shallow estuarine environments subject to tidal inputs, it was unclear whether circadian rhythmicity would persist following entrainment in natural conditions, or whether circatidal periodicity would predominate. Nematostella were conditioned within a marsh environment, where they experienced strong daily temperature cycles as well as brief tidal flooding around the full and new moons. Upon retrieval, anemones exhibited strong circadian (∼24 h) activity rhythms under a light–dark cycle or continuous darkness, but reduced circadian rhythmicity under continuous light. However, some individuals in each light condition showed circadian rhythmicity, and a few individuals showed circatidal rhythmicity. Consistent with the behavioral studies, a large number of transcripts (1640) exhibited diurnal rhythmicity compared with very few (64) with semidiurnal rhythmicity. Diurnal transcripts included core circadian regulators, and 101 of 434 (23%) genes that were previously found to be upregulated by exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Together, these behavioral and transcriptional studies show that circadian rhythmicity predominates and suggest that solar radiation drives physiological cycles in this sediment-dwelling subtidal animal.
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Author Posting. © Company of Biologists, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Company of Biologists for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Experimental Biology 222(21), (2019): jeb.205393, doi:10.1242/jeb.205393.
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Tarrant, A. M., Helm, R. R., Levy, O., & Rivera, H. E. (2019). Environmental entrainment demonstrates natural circadian rhythmicity in the cnidarian Nematostella vectensis. The Journal of Experimental Biology, 222(21), jeb.205393.Related items
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