Circadian system of mice integrates brief light stimuli

AN Van Den Pol, V Cao… - American Journal of …, 1998 - journals.physiology.org
AN Van Den Pol, V Cao, HC Heller
American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and …, 1998journals.physiology.org
Light is the primary sensory stimulus that synchronizes or entrains the internal circadian
rhythms of animals to the solar day. In mammals photic entrainment of the circadian
pacemaker residing in the suprachiasmatic nuclei is due to the fact that light at certain times
of day can phase shift the pacemaker. In this study we show that the circadian system of
mice can integrate extremely brief, repeated photic stimuli to produce large phase shifts. A
train of 2-ms light pulses delivered as one pulse every 5 or 60 s, with a total light duration of …
Light is the primary sensory stimulus that synchronizes or entrains the internal circadian rhythms of animals to the solar day. In mammals photic entrainment of the circadian pacemaker residing in the suprachiasmatic nuclei is due to the fact that light at certain times of day can phase shift the pacemaker. In this study we show that the circadian system of mice can integrate extremely brief, repeated photic stimuli to produce large phase shifts. A train of 2-ms light pulses delivered as one pulse every 5 or 60 s, with a total light duration of 120 ms, can cause phase shifts of several hours that endure for weeks. Single 2-ms pulses of light were ineffective. Thus these data reveal a property of the mammalian circadian clock: it can integrate and store latent sensory information in such a way that a series of extremely brief photic stimuli, each too small to cause a phase shift individually, together can cause a large and long-lasting change in behavior.
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