In vivo imaging of clock gene expression in multiple tissues of freely moving mice

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作者
Toshiyuki Hamada
Kenneth Sutherland
Masayori Ishikawa
Naoki Miyamoto
Sato Honma
Hiroki Shirato
Ken-ichi Honma
机构
[1] Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine,Department of Applied Molecular
[2] Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine,Imaging Physics
[3] Hokkaido University Graduate School of Health Science,Department of Medical Physics and Engineering
[4] Global Station for Quantum Medical Science and Engineering,Department of Biomedical Science and Engineering
[5] Global Institution for Collaborative Research and Education (GI-CoRE),Department of Chronomedicine
[6] Hokkaido University,Department of Radiation Medicine
[7] Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine,undefined
[8] Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine,undefined
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摘要
Clock genes are expressed throughout the body, although how they oscillate in unrestrained animals is not known. Here, we show an in vivo imaging technique that enables long-term simultaneous imaging of multiple tissues. We use dual-focal 3D tracking and signal-intensity calibration to follow gene expression in a target area. We measure circadian rhythms of clock genes in the olfactory bulb, right and left ears and cortices, and the skin. In addition, the kinetic relationship between gene expression and physiological responses to experimental cues is monitored. Under stable conditions gene expression is in phase in all tissues. In response to a long-duration light pulse, the olfactory bulb shifts faster than other tissues. In Cry1−/−Cry2−/− arrhythmic mice circadian oscillation is absent in all tissues. Thus, our system successfully tracks circadian rhythms in clock genes in multiple tissues in unrestrained mice.
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