4.5 Article

Circadian clocks in crustaceans: identified neuronal and cellular systems

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE-LANDMARK
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages 1040-+

Publisher

BIOSCIENCE RESEARCH INST-BRI
DOI: 10.2741/3661

Keywords

Crustacean; Circadian Rhythm; Ultradian Rhythm; Circadian Clock; Pacemaker; Clock Genes; Period; Cryptochrome; Pigment Migration; Red Pigment Concentrating Hormone; Crustacean Hyperglycaemic Hormone; Pigment Dispersing Hormone; Serotonin; Melatonin; Caudal Photoreceptor; Extraretinal Photoreceptor; Crayfish; Drosophila; Procambarus Clarkii; Cherax Destructor; Carcinus Maenas; X-Organ Sinus Gland System; Review

Funding

  1. Swedish Carl Tryggers Foundation
  2. Faculty of Natural Sciences at Stockholm University

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Circadian rhythms are known for locomotory and reproductive behaviours, and the functioning of sensory organs, nervous structures, metabolism and developmental processes. The mechanisms and cellular bases of control are mainly inferred from circadian phenomenologies, ablation experiments and pharmacological approaches. Cellular systems for regulation summarised here comprise the retina, the eyestalk neuroendocrine X-organ-sinus gland system, several neuropeptides such as red pigment concentrating, hyperglycaemic and pigment-dispersing hormones, and factors such as serotonin and melatonin. No master clock has been identified, but a model of distributed clockwork involves oscillators such as the retinular cells, neurosecretory systems in the optic lobes, putative brain pacemakers, and the caudal photoreceptor. Extraretinal brain photoreceptors mediate entrainment. Comparative analyses of clock neurons and proteins known from insects may allow the identification of candidate clock neurons in crustaceans as putative homologues in the two taxa. Evidence for the existence of insect-like intracellular clock proteins and (light sensitive) transcription factors is scarce, but clock-, period-, and cryptochrome-gene products have been localised in the CNS and other organs rendering further investigations into crustacean clockwork very promising.

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