Cargando…

Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats

Anticipation of a daily meal in rats has been conceptualized as a rest-activity rhythm driven by a food-entrained circadian oscillator separate from the pacemaker generating light-dark (LD) entrained rhythms. Rats can also anticipate two daily mealtimes, but whether this involves independently entra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mistlberger, Ralph E., Kent, Brianne A., Chan, Sofina, Patton, Danica F., Weinberg, Alexander, Parfyonov, Maksim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3280322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22355393
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031772
_version_ 1782223816950284288
author Mistlberger, Ralph E.
Kent, Brianne A.
Chan, Sofina
Patton, Danica F.
Weinberg, Alexander
Parfyonov, Maksim
author_facet Mistlberger, Ralph E.
Kent, Brianne A.
Chan, Sofina
Patton, Danica F.
Weinberg, Alexander
Parfyonov, Maksim
author_sort Mistlberger, Ralph E.
collection PubMed
description Anticipation of a daily meal in rats has been conceptualized as a rest-activity rhythm driven by a food-entrained circadian oscillator separate from the pacemaker generating light-dark (LD) entrained rhythms. Rats can also anticipate two daily mealtimes, but whether this involves independently entrained oscillators, one ‘continuously consulted’ clock, cue-dependent non-circadian interval timing or a combination of processes, is unclear. Rats received two daily meals, beginning 3-h (meal 1) and 13-h (meal 2) after lights-on (LD 14∶10). Anticipatory wheel running began 68±8 min prior to meal 1 and 101±9 min prior to meal 2 but neither the duration nor the variability of anticipation bout lengths exhibited the scalar property, a hallmark of interval timing. Meal omission tests in LD and constant dark (DD) did not alter the timing of either bout of anticipation, and anticipation of meal 2 was not altered by a 3-h advance of meal 1. Food anticipatory running in this 2-meal protocol thus does not exhibit properties of interval timing despite the availability of external time cues in LD. Across all days, the two bouts of anticipation were uncorrelated, a result more consistent with two independently entrained oscillators than a single consulted clock. Similar results were obtained for meals scheduled 3-h and 10-h after lights-on, and for a food-bin measure of anticipation. Most rats that showed weak or no anticipation to one or both meals exhibited elevated activity at mealtime during 1 or 2 day food deprivation tests in DD, suggesting covert operation of circadian timing in the absence of anticipatory behavior. A control experiment confirmed that daytime feeding did not shift LD-entrained rhythms, ruling out displaced nocturnal activity as an explanation for daytime activity. The results favor a multiple oscillator basis for 2-meal anticipatory rhythms and provide no evidence for involvement of cue-dependent interval timing.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3280322
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32803222012-02-21 Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats Mistlberger, Ralph E. Kent, Brianne A. Chan, Sofina Patton, Danica F. Weinberg, Alexander Parfyonov, Maksim PLoS One Research Article Anticipation of a daily meal in rats has been conceptualized as a rest-activity rhythm driven by a food-entrained circadian oscillator separate from the pacemaker generating light-dark (LD) entrained rhythms. Rats can also anticipate two daily mealtimes, but whether this involves independently entrained oscillators, one ‘continuously consulted’ clock, cue-dependent non-circadian interval timing or a combination of processes, is unclear. Rats received two daily meals, beginning 3-h (meal 1) and 13-h (meal 2) after lights-on (LD 14∶10). Anticipatory wheel running began 68±8 min prior to meal 1 and 101±9 min prior to meal 2 but neither the duration nor the variability of anticipation bout lengths exhibited the scalar property, a hallmark of interval timing. Meal omission tests in LD and constant dark (DD) did not alter the timing of either bout of anticipation, and anticipation of meal 2 was not altered by a 3-h advance of meal 1. Food anticipatory running in this 2-meal protocol thus does not exhibit properties of interval timing despite the availability of external time cues in LD. Across all days, the two bouts of anticipation were uncorrelated, a result more consistent with two independently entrained oscillators than a single consulted clock. Similar results were obtained for meals scheduled 3-h and 10-h after lights-on, and for a food-bin measure of anticipation. Most rats that showed weak or no anticipation to one or both meals exhibited elevated activity at mealtime during 1 or 2 day food deprivation tests in DD, suggesting covert operation of circadian timing in the absence of anticipatory behavior. A control experiment confirmed that daytime feeding did not shift LD-entrained rhythms, ruling out displaced nocturnal activity as an explanation for daytime activity. The results favor a multiple oscillator basis for 2-meal anticipatory rhythms and provide no evidence for involvement of cue-dependent interval timing. Public Library of Science 2012-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3280322/ /pubmed/22355393 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031772 Text en Mistlberger et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mistlberger, Ralph E.
Kent, Brianne A.
Chan, Sofina
Patton, Danica F.
Weinberg, Alexander
Parfyonov, Maksim
Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title_full Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title_fullStr Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title_full_unstemmed Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title_short Circadian Clocks for All Meal-Times: Anticipation of 2 Daily Meals in Rats
title_sort circadian clocks for all meal-times: anticipation of 2 daily meals in rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3280322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22355393
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031772
work_keys_str_mv AT mistlbergerralphe circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats
AT kentbriannea circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats
AT chansofina circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats
AT pattondanicaf circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats
AT weinbergalexander circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats
AT parfyonovmaksim circadianclocksforallmealtimesanticipationof2dailymealsinrats