Abstract

SummaryBackgroundTidal (12.4 hr) cycles of behavior and physiology adapt intertidal organisms to temporally complex coastal environments, yet their underlying mechanism is unknown. However, the very existence of an independent “circatidal” clock has been disputed, and it has been argued that tidal rhythms arise as a submultiple of a circadian clock, operating in dual oscillators whose outputs are held in antiphase i.e., ∼12.4 hr apart.ResultsWe demonstrate that the intertidal crustacean Eurydice pulchra (Leach) exhibits robust tidal cycles of swimming in parallel to circadian (24 hr) rhythms in behavioral, physiological and molecular phenotypes. Importantly, ∼12.4 hr cycles of swimming are sustained in constant conditions, they can be entrained by suitable stimuli, and they are temperature compensated, thereby meeting the three criteria that define a biological clock. Unexpectedly, tidal rhythms (like circadian rhythms) are sensitive to pharmacological inhibition of Casein kinase 1, suggesting the possibility of shared clock substrates. However, cloning the canonical circadian genes of E. pulchra to provide molecular markers of circadian timing and also reagents to disrupt it by RNAi revealed that environmental and molecular manipulations that confound circadian timing do not affect tidal timing. Thus, competent circadian timing is neither an inevitable nor necessary element of tidal timekeeping.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that tidal rhythms are driven by a dedicated circatidal pacemaker that is distinct from the circadian system of E. pulchra, thereby resolving a long-standing debate regarding the nature of the circatidal mechanism.

Highlights

  • Circadian timekeeping, driven by intrinsic clocks with a period of approximately 24 hr, is common to all kingdoms of life

  • Their independent existence is questioned by the view that the tidal mechanism is a submultiple of the 24 hr clock, sharing circadian components to generate two oscillators whose outputs are in antiphase w12.4 hr apart [6]

  • The alternative view is of a dedicated, independent circatidal (12.4 hr) oscillator that may interact with the circadian clock but that uses different molecular components [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Driven by intrinsic clocks with a period of approximately 24 hr, is common to all kingdoms of life. Intertidal plants and animals show adaptive, free-running w12.4 hr (i.e., circatidal) rhythms of behavior, metabolism, and reproduction that are synchronized to the tidal environment by relevant cues, including turbulence/vibration, moonlight, salinity, and temperature changes [5]. Such free-running rhythms suggest the presence of endogenous circatidal clocks, but despite extensive behavioral descriptions, the molecular components of tidal clocks are largely unexplored. This debate has persisted for many years in the absence of any definitive experiments

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