Characterization of Circadian Behavior in the Starlet Sea Anemone, Nematostella vectensis
Nematostella vectensis. PLoS
ONE 7(10): e46843. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0046843
Characterization of Circadian Behavior in the Starlet Sea Anemone, Nematostella vectensis
William D. Hendricks 0
Christine A. Byrum 0
Elizabeth L. Meyer-Bernstein 0
Shin Yamazaki, Vanderbilt University, United States of America
0 Department of Biology and Program in Neuroscience, College of Charleston , Charleston, South Carolina , United States of America
Background: Although much is known about how circadian systems control daily cycles in the physiology and behavior of Drosophila and several vertebrate models, marine invertebrates have often been overlooked in circadian rhythms research. This study focuses on the starlet sea anemone, Nematostella vectensis, a species that has received increasing attention within the scientific community for its potential as a model research organism. The recently sequenced genome of N. vectensis makes it an especially attractive model for exploring the molecular evolution of circadian behavior. Critical behavioral data needed to correlate gene expression patterns to specific behaviors are currently lacking in N. vectensis. Methodology/Principal Findings: To detect the presence of behavioral oscillations in N. vectensis, locomotor activity was evaluated using an automated system in an environmentally controlled chamber. Animals exposed to a 24 hr photoperiod (12 hr light: 12 hr dark) exhibited locomotor behavior that was both rhythmic and predominantly nocturnal. The activity peak occurred in the early half of the night with a 2-fold increase in locomotion. Upon transfer to constant lighting conditions (constant light or constant dark), an approximately 24 hr rhythm persisted in most animals, suggesting that the rhythm is controlled by an endogenous circadian mechanism. Fourier analysis revealed the presence of multiple peaks in some animals suggesting additional rhythmic components could be present. In particular, an approximately 12 hr oscillation was often observed. The nocturnal increase in generalized locomotion corresponded to a 24 hr oscillation in animal elongation. Conclusions/Significance: These data confirm the presence of a light-entrainable circadian clock in Nematostella vectensis. Additional components observed in some individuals indicate that an endogenous clock of approximately 12 hr frequency may also be present. By describing rhythmic locomotor behavior in N. vectensis, we have made important progress in developing the sea anemone as a model organism for circadian rhythm research.
-
Funding: The project described was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant P20 RR-016461 from the National Center for Research Resource, The
College of Charleston, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Undergraduate Education Grant. The funders had no role in study design, data collection
and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Throughout the natural world, rhythms in behavior and
physiology have been observed in most organisms, including
eukaryotes, prokaryotes, and even in members of the Archaea.
The range of frequencies in which these biological oscillations
are expressed within an individual can be quite diverse and is
likely to depend on the organisms specific needs for survival.
The spectrum of rhythms includes ultradian (minutes), circatidal
(12.4 hrs), circadian (24 hrs), circalunar-day (24.8 hrs), semilunar
(15 days), lunar (28 days), or circannual (yearly) oscillations
[1,2,3,4]. Among these, the most widely studied is the circadian
rhythm, a cyclic pattern that has been documented in most
species studied to date. Undoubtedly, the ubiquitous presence of
the circadian rhythm is an indication of the evolutionary
significance of this particular temporal oscillation.
Although regulation of circadian cycles has been thoroughly
investigated in some derived metazoan taxa, much remains to
be learned about circadian control in pleisiomorphic groups
such as the Cnidaria. In this phylum, which includes organisms
such as sea anemones, corals, jellyfish, and Hydra, diel patterns
of behavior have been documented in species of the subphyla
Anthozoa [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13] and Medusozoa
[14,15,16,17,18,19,20], but only a few investigators have
attempted to discern whether these behaviors are direct
responses to changes in light availability or whether the
behavior is endogenously generated by a circadian clock.
Depending on the species tested and the environmental
conditions, studies have reported the presence of behaviors
dependent on an internal clock, as well as behaviors that cycle
merely in response to the exogenous photoperiod. Specifically,
in some of the earliest studies, Bohn [5] found that retraction
and expansion of the body column in the sea anemone Actinia
equina followed a daily pattern that persisted in constant
darkness for 3 to 8 days in the laboratory. Similar observations
were made in the sea anemone Metridium senile [6] and the sea
pen Cavernularia obesa [7,8]. In contrast, an early study by Parker
[5] reported that the sea anemone Metridium marginatum
exhibited daily oscillations in expansion and retraction that
failed to persist under constant dim lighting. These
inconsistencies have also been observed in some coral species. The
comparative work of Sweeney [9] looked at circadian behaviors
in 21 coral species. In most corals studied, tentacle expansion
fluctuated daily. Typically, individuals were nocturnal, extending
their tentacles at night and retracting them during the day.
When exposed to continuous darkness, only the fungids
continued to exhibit rhythmic patterns of contraction and
expansion. The non-persistent behaviors reported in some of the
corals and sea anemones may indicate that these measured
behaviors are not under the control of a circadian clock, but
this does not exclude the possibility of a circadian mechanism
governing oscillations of other behaviors in these organisms.
Moreover, these early studies typically utilized equipment that
may not have permitted full characterization of the observed
behaviors. Thus, the presence and function of an internal
circadian clock within the phylum Cnidaria has not been
completely resolved.
We have chosen to study circadian cycles in N. vectensis because
this easily manipulated species has the potential to reveal the
molecular basis of circadian cycles both in basal taxonomic groups
and in economically desirable species such as corals. This species
has become a critical model for studies in developmental biology
and molecular evolution because it is quite hardy, can be induced
to spawn throughout the year, and has a genome that is publicly
accessible [21,22,23]. Also, as a cnidarian, it occupies a basal
taxonomic position among metazoan phyla and, as a member of
the class Anthozoa, it is pleisiomorphic within that phylum. These
features make (...truncated)