Paranjpe Dhanashree A, Anitha D, Chandrashekaran M K, Joshi Amitabh, Sharma Vijay Kumar
Chronobiology Laboratory, Evolutionary and Organismal Biology Unit, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, PO, Box, 6436, Jakkur, Bangalore-560064, Karnataka, India.
BMC Dev Biol. 2005 Feb 22;5:5. doi: 10.1186/1471-213X-5-5.
In insects, circadian clocks have been implicated in affecting life history traits such as pre-adult development time and adult lifespan. Studies on the period (per) mutants of Drosophila melanogaster, and laboratory-selected lines of Bactrocera cucurbitae suggested a close link between circadian clocks and development time. There is a possibility of clock genes having pleiotropic effects on clock period and pre-adult development time. In order to avoid such pleiotropic effects we have used wild type flies of same genotype under environments of different periodicities, which phenotypically either speeded up or slowed down the eclosion clock of D. melanogaster.
We assayed pre-adult development time and pre-adult survivorship of four laboratory populations of D. melanogaster, under five different light regimes, continuous light (LL), continuous darkness (DD), and light-dark (LD) cycles of 10:10 h (T20), 12:12 h (T24), and 14:14 h (T28). Although the development time was significantly different in most light regimes, except for females under T24 &T28, pre-adult survivorship remained largely unaffected. The development time was shortest under LL, followed by T20, DD, T24 and T28 regimes, in that order. Interestingly the development time showed a positive correlation with the period of eclosion rhythm, i.e., faster oscillations were associated with faster development, and slower oscillations with slower development.
Based on these results we conclude that periodicity of imposed LD cycles, and/or of eclosion rhythm plays a key role in regulating the duration of pre-adult development in D. melanogaster in a manner that does not involve direct pleiotropic effects of clock genes on both clock period and development time.
在昆虫中,生物钟与影响诸如成虫前发育时间和成虫寿命等生活史特征有关。对黑腹果蝇周期(per)突变体以及南瓜实蝇实验室选择品系的研究表明生物钟与发育时间之间存在紧密联系。生物钟基因有可能对生物钟周期和成虫前发育时间具有多效性影响。为了避免这种多效性影响,我们在不同周期环境下使用了相同基因型的野生型果蝇,这些环境在表型上要么加快要么减慢了黑腹果蝇的羽化生物钟。
我们测定了四个黑腹果蝇实验室种群在五种不同光照条件下的成虫前发育时间和成虫前存活率,这五种光照条件分别是持续光照(LL)、持续黑暗(DD)以及10:10小时(T20)、12:12小时(T24)和14:14小时(T28)的明暗(LD)循环。尽管在大多数光照条件下发育时间存在显著差异,但除了T24和T28条件下的雌性果蝇外,成虫前存活率基本不受影响。发育时间在LL条件下最短,其次依次是T20、DD、T24和T28条件。有趣的是,发育时间与羽化节律的周期呈正相关,即更快的振荡与更快的发育相关,而较慢的振荡与较慢的发育相关。
基于这些结果,我们得出结论,施加的LD循环的周期性和/或羽化节律在调节黑腹果蝇成虫前发育持续时间方面起着关键作用,其方式不涉及生物钟基因对生物钟周期和发育时间的直接多效性影响。