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Transcriptional Response of Circadian Clock Genes to an 'Artificial Light at Night' Pulse in the Cricket Gryllus bimaculatus.


ABSTRACT: Light is the major signal entraining the circadian clock that regulates physiological and behavioral rhythms in most organisms, including insects. Artificial light at night (ALAN) disrupts the natural light-dark cycle and negatively impacts animals at various levels. We simulated ALAN using dim light stimuli and tested their impact on gene expression in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, a model of insect physiology and chronobiology. At night, adult light-dark-regime-raised crickets were exposed for 30 min to a light pulse of 2-40 lx. The relative expression of five circadian-clock-associated genes was compared using qPCR. A dim ALAN pulse elicited tissue-dependent differential expression in some of these genes. The strongest effect was observed in the brain and in the optic lobe, the cricket's circadian pacemaker. The expression of opsin-Long Wave (opLW) was upregulated, as well as cryptochrome1-2 (cry) and period (per). Our findings demonstrate that even a dim ALAN exposure may affect insects at the molecular level, underscoring the impact of ALAN on the circadian clock system.

SUBMITTER: Levy K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9570371 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Transcriptional Response of Circadian Clock Genes to an 'Artificial Light at Night' Pulse in the Cricket <i>Gryllus bimaculatus</i>.

Levy Keren K   Fishman Bettina B   Barnea Anat A   Ayali Amir A   Tauber Eran E  

International journal of molecular sciences 20220926 19


Light is the major signal entraining the circadian clock that regulates physiological and behavioral rhythms in most organisms, including insects. Artificial light at night (ALAN) disrupts the natural light-dark cycle and negatively impacts animals at various levels. We simulated ALAN using dim light stimuli and tested their impact on gene expression in the cricket <i>Gryllus bimaculatus</i>, a model of insect physiology and chronobiology. At night, adult light-dark-regime-raised crickets were e  ...[more]

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