Poletini Maristela O, Moraes Maria Nathália, Ramos Bruno César, Jerônimo Rodrigo, Castrucci Ana Maria de Lauro
Department of Physiology and Biophysics; Institute of Biological Sciences; Federal University of Minas Gerais ; Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Department of Physiology; Institute of Biosciences; University of Sao Paulo ; São Paulo, Brazil.
Temperature (Austin). 2015 Dec 30;2(4):522-34. doi: 10.1080/23328940.2015.1115803. eCollection 2015 Oct-Dec.
Circadian rhythm may be understood as a temporal organization that works to orchestrate physiological processes and behavior in a period of approximately 24 h. Because such temporal organization has evolved in the presence of predictable environmental clues, such as day length, tides, seasons, and temperature, the organism has confronted the natural selection in highly precise intervals of opportunities and risks, generating temporal programs and resetting mechanisms, which are well conserved among different taxa of animals. The present review brings some evidence of how these programs may have co-evolved in systems able to deal with 2 or more environmental clues, and how they similarly function in different group of animals, stressing how important temperature and light were to establish the temporal organizations. For example, melanopsin and rhodopsin, photopigments present respectively in circadian and visual photoreceptors, are required for temperature discrimination in Drosophila melanogaster. These pigments may signal light and temperature via activation of cationic membrane channel, named transient-receptor potential channel (TRP). In fact, TRPs have been suggested to function as thermal sensor for various groups of animals. Another example is the clock machinery at the molecular level. A set of very-well conserved proteins, known as clock proteins, function as transcription factors in positive and negative auto-regulatory loops generating circadian changes of their expression, and of clock-controlled genes. Similar molecular machinery is present in organisms as diverse as cyanobacteria (Synechococcus), fungi (Neurospora), insects (Drosophila), and vertebrates including humans.
昼夜节律可被理解为一种时间组织,它致力于在大约24小时的周期内协调生理过程和行为。由于这种时间组织是在诸如日长、潮汐、季节和温度等可预测的环境线索存在的情况下进化而来的,生物体在高度精确的机会和风险间隔中面临自然选择,从而产生了时间程序和重置机制,这些在不同动物类群中都得到了很好的保留。本综述提供了一些证据,说明这些程序如何在能够处理两种或更多环境线索的系统中共同进化,以及它们在不同动物群体中如何发挥类似的功能,强调了温度和光对于建立时间组织的重要性。例如,黑腹果蝇的温度辨别需要分别存在于昼夜节律光感受器和视觉光感受器中的视黑素和视紫红质这两种光色素。这些色素可能通过激活名为瞬时受体电位通道(TRP)的阳离子膜通道来传递光和温度信号。事实上,TRP被认为是各种动物群体的热传感器。另一个例子是分子水平上的生物钟机制。一组非常保守的蛋白质,即生物钟蛋白,在正负自调节回路中作为转录因子发挥作用,产生它们自身表达以及生物钟控制基因表达的昼夜变化。类似的分子机制存在于多种生物体中,如蓝细菌(聚球藻属)、真菌(粗糙脉孢菌)、昆虫(果蝇)以及包括人类在内的脊椎动物。