| Literature DB >> 22461765 |
Vincent M Cassone1, David F Westneat.
Abstract
Avian behavior and physiology are embedded in time at many levels of biological organization. Biological clock function in birds is critical for sleep/wake cycles, but may also regulate the acquisition of place memory, learning of song from tutors, social integration, and time-compensated navigation. This relationship has two major implications. First, mechanisms of the circadian clock should be linked in some way to the mechanisms of all these behaviors. How is not yet clear, and evidence that the central clock has effects is piecemeal. Second, selection acting on characters that are linked to the circadian clock should influence aspects of the clock mechanism itself. Little evidence exists for this in birds, but there have been few attempts to assess this idea. At its core, the avian circadian clock is a multi-oscillator system comprising the pineal gland, the retinae, and the avian homologs of the suprachiasmatic nuclei, whose mutual interactions ensure coordinated physiological functions, which are in turn synchronized to ambient light cycles (LD) via encephalic, pineal, and retinal photoreceptors. At the molecular level, avian biological clocks comprise a genetic network of "positive elements" clock and bmal1 whose interactions with the "negative elements" period 2 (per2), period 3 (per3), and the cryptochromes form an oscillatory feedback loop that circumnavigates the 24 h of the day. We assess the possibilities for dual integration of the clock with time-dependent cognitive processes. Closer examination of the molecular, physiological, and behavioral elements of the circadian system would place birds at a very interesting fulcrum in the neurobiology of time in learning, memory, and navigation.Entities:
Keywords: bird song; caching; circadian; homing; melatonin; navigation; pineal gland
Year: 2012 PMID: 22461765 PMCID: PMC3309970 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2012.00032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1Schematic of the avian circadian clock. The pineal gland secretes melatonin during the night, and inhibits the output of the mSCN and vSCN (collectively the SCN here). The SCN in turn inhibits the output of the pineal gland through a multisynaptic pathway via the sympathetic nervous system and norepinephrine (NE).
Figure 2Schematic of the passerine song control nuclei. (A) The anterior forebrain pathway involves a loop among the HVC, Area X (X), the dorsolateral thalamus (DLM), and the lateral magnocellular nucleus of the anterior nidopallium (lMAN). (B) These output through the song motor output pathway in which HVC and lMAN project to the robust nucleus of the archipallium (RA), which in turn projects to vocal motor pathways controlling the syrinx.
Figure 3The circadian clock influences the song control system through the secretion of melatonin via melatonin receptors in the HVC, lMAN, Area X, and RA.