4.2 Article

Circadian effects of light no brighter than moonlight

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 356-367

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0748730407301988

Keywords

dim light; circadian visual system; irradiance; constant conditions; phase shift; phase response curve; PRC

Funding

  1. PHS HHS [36460] Funding Source: Medline

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In mammals, light entrains endogenous circadian pacemakers by inducing daily phase shifts via a photoreceptor mechanism recently discovered in retinal ganglion cells. Light that is comparable in intensity to moonlight is generally ineffective at inducing phase shifts or suppressing melatonin secretion, which has prompted the view that circadian photic sensitivity has been titrated so that the central pacemaker is unaffected by natural nighttime illumination. However, the authors have shown in several different entrainment paradigms that completely dark nights are not functionally equivalent to dimly lit nights, even when nighttime illumination is below putative thresholds for the circadian visual system. The present studies extend these findings. Dim illumination is shown here to be neither a strong zeitgeber, consistent with published fluence response curves, nor a potentiator of other zeitgebers. Nevertheless, dim light markedly alters the behavior of the free-running circadian pacemaker. Syrian hamsters were released from entrained conditions into constant darkness or dim narrowband green illumination (similar to 0.01 Ix, 1.3 x 10-(9) W/cm(2), peak lambda = 560 nm). Relative to complete darkness, constant dim light lengthened the period by similar to 0.3 h and altered the waveform of circadian rhythmicity. Among animals transferred from long day lengths (14 L:10 D) into constant conditions, dim illumination increased the duration of the active phase (cc) by similar to 3 h relative to complete darkness. Short day entrainment (8 L:16 D) produced initially long (x that increased further under constant dim light but decreased under complete darkness. In contrast, dim light pulses 2 h or longer produced effects on circadian phase and melatonin secretion that were small in magnitude. Furthermore, the amplitude of phase resetting to bright light and nonphotic stimuli was similar against dimly lit and dark backgrounds, indicating that the former does not directly amplify circadian inputs. Dim illumination markedly alters circadian waveform through effects on (x, suggesting that dim light influences the coupling between oscillators theorized to program the beginning and end of subjective night. Physiological mechanisms responsible for conveying dim light stimuli to the pacemaker and implications for chronotherapeutics warrant further study.

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