Author:
BATTELLE BARBARA-ANNE,WILLIAMS CHRISTOPHER D.,SCHREMSER-BERLIN JERI-LYNN,CACCIATORE CHELSI
Abstract
Most animals experience daily changes in light
and darkness. The retinas of many of these animals show
concomitant rhythmic changes in the levels of mRNAs that
encode proteins involved in the photoresponse. These changes
may be circadian and independent of light, independent
of circadian clocks and regulated by light, or regulated
by a circadian clock and light. We have taken advantage
of the organization of the Limulus visual system
to examine the separate and combined effects of signals
from a circadian clock and light on arrestin mRNA levels
in photoreceptors. The clock that regulates photoreceptors
in the lateral eye of Limulus is in the brain,
and signals from the clock reach the lateral eye via
activation of a well-characterized efferent projection
in the lateral optic nerve. In the experiments described,
clock-driven efferent input to the lateral eye was eliminated
by cutting the lateral optic nerve, and light input to
the lateral eye was eliminated by placing an opaque patch
over the eye. Arrestin mRNA levels were quantified relative
to 18s rRNA with a ribonuclease protection assay. We observed
the following. In lateral eyes exposed to natural diurnal
light and endogenous efferent nerve activity, the level
of arrestin mRNA was higher during the day in the light
than during the night in the dark. Circadian efferent nerve
activity was necessary and sufficient to produce normal
daily fluctuations in the level of arrestin mRNA. Light
influenced arrestin mRNA levels only in eyes with intact
and active efferent projections. We conclude that arrestin
mRNA levels in lateral eye photoreceptors are controlled
entirely by efferent nerve activity, and that light exerts
its effects by modulating this output from the circadian
clock. Light-stimulated changes in arrestin mRNA in the
vertebrate retina may likewise require interactions between
light-driven biochemical cascades and clock output.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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