The surprise is that the
circadian cycle dominates even in a tidal zone clearly managed by the
moon. This is a little unexpected and it
needs to be repeated across a variety of other creatures exposed to alternative
cycles.
In the meantime we get to know
more about mussels and their ability to switch from anaerobic to aerobic.
The circadian cycle is the one
cycle most creatures are exposed to at all, so its dominance is not too
surprising.
Day and night cycle even more important to life than previously suspected
by Staff Writers
Researchers at USC were surprised recently to discover just how much
the rising and setting of the sun drives life on Earth - even in unexpected
places.
Their findings, which appear this month in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, "speak volumes to the evolution of life on
Earth," according to USC scientist Andrew Y. Gracey.
"Everything is tied to the rotation of the planet," he said.
In all organisms, a certain amount of gene expression (the process by
which products are created from the blueprint contained in genes) is rhythmic.
In creatures that live on land, that rhythm is unsurprisingly tied to the
24-hour day, known as the circadian cycle.
Mussels - which Gracey chose to study - instead spend their
entire lives in
dark shells in an area between the land and the sea, submerged or exposed
depending on the tide.
Most of their physical activity is based on the tidal cycle; when
mussels are exposed to the air, they close their shells and switch to an
anaerobic metabolism, starving for oxygen, and when submerged they breathe and
feed.
"It's a really profound change in their biology as they go from
sea to land," said Gracey, assistant professor of biological sciences at
the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.
One would expect, then, that the tidal cycle would be the clock that
drives their gene expression. But in fact, as Gracey's tests discovered, while
a "tidal clock" probably does exist for mussels, the lion's share of
their gene expression is instead driven by the circadian cycle.
"The circadian cycle is trumping the tidal cycle," Gracey
said.
Gracey and USC graduate student Kwasi Connor constructed an aquarium
with an artificial tide by pumping water in and out every six hours. For four
days straight, Connor collected samples every two hours - getting excellent
data, but not much sleep.
"That's why this paper is so good; we have such a high
resolution," Gracey said.
Connor shrugged off the sacrifice in the name of science: "It's
critical that you get up and do measurements in a precise manner, otherwise you
lose the value of the data," he said.
Later, Gracey and Connor ran a similar simulation in a more natural
environment by suspending cages of mussels off of a dock, this time for 50
hours.
The results were unexpected. Of the genes that showed rhythmic
expression, between 80 and 90 percent were driven by the circadian cycle.
The Importance of Life’s Day/Night Cycle
USC assistant professor Andrew Gracey, left, and graduate student Kwasi
Connor
Photo/Dennis Martinez
By Robert Perkins on September 13, 2011 7:55 AM
USC researchers were surprised recently to discover just how much the
rising and setting of the sun drives life on Earth - even in unexpected places.
The findings, which appear this month in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, “speak volumes to the evolution of life on
Earth,” according to USC scientist Andrew Gracey.
“Everything is tied to the rotation of the planet,” he said.
In all organisms, a certain amount of gene expression (the process by
which products are created from the blueprint contained in genes) is rhythmic.
In creatures that live on land, that rhythm not surprisingly is tied to the
24-hour day, known as the circadian cycle.
Mussels - which Gracey chose to study - instead spend their entire
lives in dark shells in an area between the land and the sea, submerged or
exposed depending on the tide.
Most of their physical activity is based on the tidal cycle. When
mussels are exposed to the air, they close their shells and switch to an
anaerobic metabolism, starving for oxygen, and when submerged, they breathe and
feed.
“It’s a really profound change in their biology as they go from sea to
land,” said Gracey, assistant professor of biological sciences at the USC
Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.
One would expect, then, that the tidal cycle would be the clock that
drives their gene expression. But in fact, as Gracey’s tests discovered, while
a “tidal clock” probably does exist for mussels, the lion’s share of their gene
expression instead is driven by the circadian cycle.
“The circadian cycle is trumping the tidal cycle,” Gracey said.
Gracey and USC graduate student Kwasi Connor constructed an aquarium
with an artificial tide by pumping water in and out every six hours. For four
days straight, Connor collected samples every two hours - getting excellent
data, but not much sleep.
“That’s why this paper is so good; we have such a high resolution,”
Gracey said.
Connor shrugged off the sacrifice in the name of science: “It’s
critical that you get up and do measurements in a precise manner, otherwise you
lose the value of the data,” he said.
Later, Gracey and Connor ran a similar simulation in a more natural
environment by suspending cages of mussels off of a dock, this time for 50
hours.
The results were unexpected. Of the genes that showed rhythmic
expression, between 80 and 90 percent were driven by the circadian cycle.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.
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