Repeated Evolution Of Circadian Clock Dysregulation In Cavefish Populations

PLOS GENETICS(2021)

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摘要
Author summary Biological rhythms are molecular, physiological, and behavioral changes that follow a daily cycle and allow for animals to coordinate critical biological processes with their external environment. While these clocks are ubiquitous from unicellular life through humans, little is known about how they evolve in the absence of daily cycling within an environment. In this study, we sought to understand the evolutionary response of the biological clock when organisms become established in an environment that lacks daily fluctuations in light, temperature, and other environmental factors. Astyanax mexicanus have repeatedly moved from surface rivers into caves where they live in complete darkness. We find that multiple populations of cavefish have disrupted biological clocks compared to their surface relatives, but that these clocks are disrupted via different molecular mechanisms in different populations. Our results suggest that changes to the biological clock in these populations may also affect aspects of cavefish behavior, like the sleep-wake cycle. This study demonstrates that moving into an environment without daily cycles has led to predictable disruptions to the biological clock among cavefish populations, but that the clock itself can be broken multiple ways.Circadian rhythms are nearly ubiquitous throughout nature, suggesting they are critical for survival in diverse environments. Organisms inhabiting largely arrhythmic environments, such as caves, offer a unique opportunity to study the evolution of circadian rhythms in response to changing ecological pressures. Populations of the Mexican tetra, Astyanax mexicanus, have repeatedly invaded caves from surface rivers, where individuals must contend with perpetual darkness, reduced food availability, and limited fluctuations in daily environmental cues. To investigate the molecular basis for evolved changes in circadian rhythms, we investigated rhythmic transcription across multiple independently-evolved cavefish populations. Our findings reveal that evolution in a cave environment has led to the repeated disruption of the endogenous biological clock, and its entrainment by light. The circadian transcriptome shows widespread reductions and losses of rhythmic transcription and changes to the timing of the activation/repression of core-transcriptional clock. In addition to dysregulation of the core clock, we find that rhythmic transcription of the melatonin regulator aanat2 and melatonin rhythms are disrupted in cavefish under darkness. Mutants of aanat2 and core clock gene rorca disrupt diurnal regulation of sleep in A. mexicanus, phenocopying circadian modulation of sleep and activity phenotypes of cave populations. Together, these findings reveal multiple independent mechanisms for loss of circadian rhythms in cavefish populations and provide a platform for studying how evolved changes in the biological clock can contribute to variation in sleep and circadian behavior.
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circadian clock dysregulation
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