Functional eyes are not required for a working circadian clock in zebrafish, as a research team including CNRS scientists has now shown.
Though it is understood that the eye plays a key role in mammalian adaptation to day-night cycles, the circadian clock is most often studied in nocturnal vertebrates such as mice. The zebrafish, in contrast, is a diurnal vertebrate. Through observation of various zebrafish larvae lacking functional eyes, the team of scientists has demonstrated that the latter are not needed to establish circadian rhythms that remain synchronized with light-dark cycles in the laboratory. This suggests that, in some animal species, other neural circuits set the circadian clock.
In addition to molecular analyses, the researchers relied on video tracking of larval locomotion, the most reliable indicator in the study of the circadian clock. These findings, to be published in PLOS Genetics on 7 March, reveal major differences between organisms in the regulation of circadian rhythms.
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Journal reference:
Chaigne, C., et al. (2024). Contribution of the eye and of opn4xa function to circadian photoentrainment in the diurnal zebrafish. PLOS Genetics. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1011172.