Somatostatin regulates central clock function and circadian responses to light

Author:

Joye Deborah A. M.1,Rohr Kayla E.1,Suenkens Kimberlee1,Wuorinen Alissa1,Inda Thomas1,Arzbecker Madeline1ORCID,Mueller Emma1ORCID,Huber Alec1,Pancholi Harshida1,Blackmore Murray G.1ORCID,Carmona-Alcocer Vania1,Evans Jennifer A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI 53233

Abstract

Daily and annual changes in light are processed by central clock circuits that control the timing of behavior and physiology. The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the anterior hypothalamus processes daily photic inputs and encodes changes in day length (i.e., photoperiod), but the SCN circuits that regulate circadian and photoperiodic responses to light remain unclear. Somatostatin (SST) expression in the hypothalamus is modulated by photoperiod, but the role of SST in SCN responses to light has not been examined. Our results indicate that SST signaling regulates daily rhythms in behavior and SCN function in a manner influenced by sex. First, we use cell-fate mapping to provide evidence that SST in the SCN is regulated by light via de novo  Sst activation. Next, we demonstrate that Sst   -/-  mice display enhanced circadian responses to light, with increased behavioral plasticity to photoperiod, jetlag, and constant light conditions. Notably, lack of Sst   -/-  eliminated sex differences in photic responses due to increased plasticity in males, suggesting that SST interacts with clock circuits that process light differently in each sex. Sst   -/-  mice also displayed an increase in the number of retinorecipient neurons in the SCN core, which express a type of SST receptor capable of resetting the molecular clock. Last, we show that lack of SST signaling modulates central clock function by influencing SCN photoperiodic encoding, network after-effects, and intercellular synchrony in a sex-specific manner. Collectively, these results provide insight into peptide signaling mechanisms that regulate central clock function and its response to light.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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