4.5 Article

The clock gene Cryptochrome 1 is involved in the photoresponse of embryonic hatching behavior in Bombyx mori

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/arch.22046

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Bombyx mori; circadian clock; Cryptochrome; egg hatch; neuropeptide

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This study found that the hatching rhythm of the silkworm was disrupted in a mutant strain with a knockout of the Cryptochrome1 (Cry1) clock gene, while wild-type embryos exhibited a normal hatching rhythm. The mutant embryos were unable to entrain their hatching rhythm under constant light or constant dark conditions. The expression of neuropeptides and hormones involved in the hatching rhythm was affected in the mutant embryos, which in turn affected the regulation of the hatching rhythm.
The hatching of insect eggs is a classic circadian behavior rhythm controlled by the biological clock. Its function is considered to impose a daily rhythm on the embryo, allowing it to hatch within a permissible time window. However, the molecular pathways through which the clock affects embryonic hatching behavior remain unclear. Here, we utilized a clock gene Cryptochrome1 (Cry1) knockout mutant to dissect the pathways by which the circadian clock affects embryonic hatching rhythm in the silkworm. In the Cry1 mutant, the embryo hatching rhythm was disrupted. Under the constant light or constant dark incubation conditions, mutant embryos lost their hatching rhythm, while wild-type embryos hatch exhibiting free-running rhythm. In the light-dark cycle (LD), the hatching rhythm of CRY1-deficient silkworms could not be entrained by the LD photoperiod during the incubation period. The messenger RNA levels and enzymatic activities of Cht and Hel in the mutant embryos were significantly reduced at circadian time 24 (CT24). Transcriptome analysis revealed significant differences in gene expression at CT24 between the Cry1 knockout mutant and the wild-type, with 2616 differentially expressed genes identified. The enriched Gene Ontology pathway includes enzyme activity, energy availability, and protein translation. Short neuropeptide F signaling was reduced in the CT24 embryonic brain of the mutant, the expression of the neuropeptide PTTH was also reduced and the rhythm was lost, which further affects ecdysteroid signaling. Our results suggested that the silkworm circadian clock affects neuropeptide-hormone signaling as well as physiological functions related to hatching, which may regulate the hatching rhythm.

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