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1 October 2014 Chronobiology of Crickets: A Review
Kenji Tomioka
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Abstract

Crickets provide a good model for the study of mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms and photoperiodic responses. They show clear circadian rhythms in their overt behavior and the sensitivity of the visual system. Classical neurobiological studies revealed that a pair of optic lobes is the locus of the circadian clock controlling these rhythms and that the compound eye is the major photoreceptor necessary for synchronization to environmental light cycles. The two optic lobe clocks are mutually coupled through a neural pathway and the coupling regulates an output circadian waveform and a free-running period. Recent molecular studies revealed that the cricket's clock consists of cyclic expression of so-called clock genes and that the clock mechanism is featured by both Drosophila-like and mammalian-like traits. Molecular oscillation is also observed in some extra-optic lobe tissues and depends on the optic lobe clock in a tissue dependent manner. Interestingly, the clock is also involved in adaptation to seasonally changing environment. It fits its waveform to a given photoperiod and may be an indispensable part of a photoperiodic time-measurement mechanism. With adoption of modern molecular technologies, the cricket becomes a much more important and promising model animal for the study of circadian and photoperiodic biology.

© 2014 Zoological Society of Japan
Kenji Tomioka "Chronobiology of Crickets: A Review," Zoological Science 31(10), 624-632, (1 October 2014). https://doi.org/10.2108/zs140024
Received: 30 January 2014; Accepted: 28 February 2014; Published: 1 October 2014
KEYWORDS
circadian rhythm
clock gene
cricket
molecular oscillation
photoperiodism
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