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Genes to Cells (2008) 13, 497-507. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2443.2008.01183.x
© 2008 Blackwell Publishing or its licensors

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Scheduled exposures to a novel environment with a running-wheel differentially accelerate re-entrainment of mice peripheral clocks to new light–dark cycles

Yujiro Yamanaka, Sato Honma and Ken-ichi Honma*

Department of Physiology, Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8638, Japan

Effects of scheduled exposures to novel environment with a running-wheel were examined on re-entrainment to 8 h shifted light–dark (LD) cycles of mouse circadian rhythms in locomotor activity and clock gene, Per1, expression in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and peripheral tissues. Per1 expression was monitored by a bioluminescence reporter introduced into mice. The animals were exposed to the novel environment for 3 h from the shifted dark onset for four cycles and released into constant darkness. In the phase-advance shift, the circadian rhythm in locomotor activity fully re-entrained in the exposed group, whereas it was in transients in the control. On the other hand, the circadian rhythm of Per1 expression in the SCN almost completely re-entrained in both the control and exposed groups. In the skeletal muscle and lung, the circadian rhythm fully re-entrained in the exposed group, whereas the rhythms in the control did not. In the phase-delay shift, the circadian rhythms in locomotor activity and Per1 expression almost completely re-entrained in both groups. These findings indicate that the scheduled exposures to novel environment with a running-wheel differentially accelerate the re-entrainment of the mouse peripheral clocks to 8 h phase-advanced LD cycles.


Communicated by: Eisuke Nishida

* Correspondence: Email: kenhonma{at}med.hokudai.ac.jp







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