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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 289: R998-R1005, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00139.2005
0363-6119/05 $8.00
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SLEEP AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION

Activity rhythm of golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) can be entrained to a 19-h light-dark cycle

Juan J. Chiesa, Montserrat Anglès-Pujolràs, Antoni Díez-Noguera, and Trinitat Cambras

Department of Physiology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

Submitted 24 February 2005 ; accepted in final form 18 May 2005

Both temporary access to a running wheel and temporary exposure to light systematically influence the phase producing entrainment of the circadian activity rhythm in the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus). However, precise determination of entrainment limits remains methodologically difficult, because such calculations may be influenced by varying experimental paradigms. In this study, effects on the entrainment of the activity pattern during successive light-dark (LD) cycles of stepwise decreasing periods, as well as wheel running activity, were investigated. In particular, the hamster activity rhythm under LD cycles with a period (T) shorter than 22 h was studied, i.e., when the LD cycle itself had been shown to be an insufficiently strong zeitgeber to synchronize activity rhythms. Indeed, it was confirmed that animals without a wheel do not entrain under 11:11-h LD cycles (T = 22 h). Subsequently providing hamsters continuous access to a running wheel established entrainment to T = 22 h. Moreover, this paradigm underwent further reductions of the T period to T = 19.6 h without loss of entrainment. Furthermore, restricting access to the wheel did not result in loss of entrainment, while even entrainment to T = 19 h was observed. To explain this observed shift in the lower entrainment limit, our speculation centers on changes in pacemaker response facilitated by stepwise changes of T spaced very far apart, thus allowing time for adaptation.

entrainment limits; wheel running; circadian rhythms



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. J. Chiesa, Departament de Fisiologia, Facultat de Farmacia, Universitat de Barcelona, Av Joan XXIII s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain (e-mail: jchiesa{at}ub.edu or cambras{at}ub.edu)







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