4.8 Article

Behavioral circatidal rhythms require Bmal1 in Parhyale hawaiensis

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 10, Pages 1867-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.03.015

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Organisms in the intertidal zone face a challenging environment with daily and seasonal changes in light intensity, weather patterns, and tides. To adapt to these conditions, intertidal animals have developed circatidal clocks, but the molecular components have been difficult to identify. This study introduces the crustacean Parhyale hawaiensis as a genetic model to study circatidal rhythms and shows that the core circadian clock gene Bmal1 is required for these rhythms. This research establishes the connection between circatidal and circadian clocks and provides a powerful system to study the molecular mechanisms of circatidal rhythms.
Organisms living in the intertidal zone are exposed to a particularly challenging environment. In addition to daily changes in light intensity and seasonal changes in photoperiod and weather patterns, they experience dramatic oscillations in environmental conditions due to the tides. To anticipate tides, and thus optimize their behavior and physiology, animals occupying intertidal ecological niches have acquired circatidal clocks. Although the existence of these clocks has long been known, their underlying molecular components have proven difficult to identify, in large part because of the lack of an intertidal model organism amenable to genetic manipulation. In particular, the relationship between the circatidal and circadian molecular clocks, and the possibility of shared genetic components, has been a long-standing question. Here, we introduce the genetically tractable crustacean Parhyale hawaiensis as a system for the study of circatidal rhythms. First, we show that P. hawaiensis exhibits robust 12.4-h rhythms of locomotion that can be entrained to an artificial tidal regimen and are temperature compensated. Using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing, we then demonstrate that the core circadian clock gene Bmal1 is required for circatidal rhythms. Our results thus demonstrate that Bmal1 is a molecular link between circatidal and circadian clocks and establish P. hawaiensis as a powerful system to study the molecular mechanisms underlying circatidal rhythms and their entrainment.

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