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Lab Mice in the Field: Unorthodox Daily Activity and Effects of a Dysfunctional Circadian Clock Allele
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Daily patterns of animal behavior are potentially of vast functional importance. Fitness benefits have been identified in nature by the association between individual timing and survival or by the fate of individuals after experimental deletion of their circadian pacemaker. The recent advances in unraveling the molecular basis of circadian timing enable new approaches to natural selection on timing. The investigators report on the effect and fate of the mutant Per2
Brdm1
allele in 4 replicate populations of house mice in a seminatural outside environment over 2 years. This allele is known to compromise circadian organization and entrainment and to cause multiple physiological disturbances. Mice ( N = 250) bred from Per2
Brdm1
heterozygotes were implanted subcutaneously with transponders and released in approximately Mendelian ratios in four 400 m
2
pens. An electronic system stored the times of all visits to feeders of each individual. The study first demonstrates that mice are not explicitly nocturnal in this natural environment. Feeding activity was predominantly and sometimes exclusively diurnal and spread nearly equally over day and night under the protective snow cover in winter. The effect of Per2
Brdm1
on activity timing is negligible compared to seasonal changes in all genotypes. Second, the Per2
Brdm1
allele did not have persistent negative effects on fitness. In the first year, the allele gradually became less frequent by reducing survival. New cohorts captured had the same Per2
Brdm1
frequency as the survivors from previous cohorts, consistent with an absence of an effect on reproduction. In the second year, the allele recovered to about its initial frequency (0.54). These changes in selective advantage were primarily due to female mice, as females lived longer and the sex ratio dropped to about 25% males in the population. While it is unknown which selective advantage led to the recovery, the results caution against inferences from laboratory experiments on fitness consequences in the natural environment. It also demonstrates that the activity of mice, while strictly nocturnal in the laboratory, may be partially or completely diurnal in the field. The new method allows assessment of natural selection on specific alleles on a day-today basis.
Title: Lab Mice in the Field: Unorthodox Daily Activity and Effects of a Dysfunctional Circadian Clock Allele
Description:
Daily patterns of animal behavior are potentially of vast functional importance.
Fitness benefits have been identified in nature by the association between individual timing and survival or by the fate of individuals after experimental deletion of their circadian pacemaker.
The recent advances in unraveling the molecular basis of circadian timing enable new approaches to natural selection on timing.
The investigators report on the effect and fate of the mutant Per2
Brdm1
allele in 4 replicate populations of house mice in a seminatural outside environment over 2 years.
This allele is known to compromise circadian organization and entrainment and to cause multiple physiological disturbances.
Mice ( N = 250) bred from Per2
Brdm1
heterozygotes were implanted subcutaneously with transponders and released in approximately Mendelian ratios in four 400 m
2
pens.
An electronic system stored the times of all visits to feeders of each individual.
The study first demonstrates that mice are not explicitly nocturnal in this natural environment.
Feeding activity was predominantly and sometimes exclusively diurnal and spread nearly equally over day and night under the protective snow cover in winter.
The effect of Per2
Brdm1
on activity timing is negligible compared to seasonal changes in all genotypes.
Second, the Per2
Brdm1
allele did not have persistent negative effects on fitness.
In the first year, the allele gradually became less frequent by reducing survival.
New cohorts captured had the same Per2
Brdm1
frequency as the survivors from previous cohorts, consistent with an absence of an effect on reproduction.
In the second year, the allele recovered to about its initial frequency (0.
54).
These changes in selective advantage were primarily due to female mice, as females lived longer and the sex ratio dropped to about 25% males in the population.
While it is unknown which selective advantage led to the recovery, the results caution against inferences from laboratory experiments on fitness consequences in the natural environment.
It also demonstrates that the activity of mice, while strictly nocturnal in the laboratory, may be partially or completely diurnal in the field.
The new method allows assessment of natural selection on specific alleles on a day-today basis.
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