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J Appl Physiol (June 6, 2003). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00707.2002
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Submitted on July 31, 2002
Accepted on May 21, 2003

CHRONIC CENTRIFUGATION (HYPERGRAVITY) DISRUPTS THE CIRCADIAN SYSTEM OF THE RAT

Daniel C Holley1*, Charles W DeRoshia2, Megan M Moran2, and Charles E Wade2

1 Department of Biological Sciences, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA, USA
2 Life Sciences Division, NASA-Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dholley{at}email.sjsu.edu.

The current study was conducted to evaluate the response of rat deep body temperature (DBT) and gross locomotor activity (LMA) circadian rhythms to acute hypergravity onset and adaptation to chronic (14 d) hypergravity exposure over 3 gravity intensities (1.25, 1.5, and 2 G). Centrifugation of unanesthetized naive animals resulted in a dramatic acute decrease in DBT (-1.45, -2.40, and -3.09 °C for the 1.25, 1.5 and 2.0 G Groups, respectively). LMA was suppressed for the duration of centrifugation (vs. control period the % decrease for each group on d 12-14 was; 1.0 G, -15.2%, n.s.; 1.25 G, -26.9%, p< 0.02; 1.5 G, -44.5%, p< 0.01; and 2.0 G. -63.1%, p< 0.002). The time required for DBT and LMA circadian rhythmic adaptation and stabilization to hypergravity onset increased from 1.25 G to 2.0 G in all circadian metrics except daily means. Periodicity analysis detected the phenomenon of circadian rhythm splitting, which has not been reported previously in response to chronic hypergravity exposure. Our analysis documents the disruptive and dose dependent effects of hypergravity on circadian rhythmicity and the time course of adaptation to 14 day chronic centrifugation exposure.




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