A single incidental dark pulse during daytime attenuated food anticipatory behavior

Commun Integr Biol. 2024 Apr 23;17(1):2341050. doi: 10.1080/19420889.2024.2341050. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Using an open-source operant feeding device (FED3), we measured food-seeking nose poking behavior in mice. When the mice were exposed to 4 h restricted feeding at night, all mice exhibited robust food anticipatory nose poking starting ~4 h before scheduled mealtime. When the light-dark cycle was advanced by 6 h, mice exhibited two distinct bouts of anticipatory poking, one corresponding to actual mealtime which continued at the same time of day, and one corresponding to predicted mealtime which shifted parallel with the light-dark cycle. Likewise, two similar bouts of food-seeking behavior appeared when the light-dark cycle was delayed for 9 h. These data suggest that food anticipatory behavior is encoded to a circadian oscillator that entrains to the light-dark cycle. Two weeks after advancing the light-dark cycle, mice incidentally received a 3.5 h dark pulse in the middle of the day. This single dark pulse had a negligible effect on running wheel behavior but caused a temporary attenuation of both food anticipatory poking and pellet intake. These results suggest that the circadian oscillator controlling food anticipatory poking is sensitive to light disruption and that proper food anticipation is critical for sufficient food intake during temporally restricted feeding.

Keywords: Circadian rhythm; extra-SCN pacemaker; food anticipation; food seeking behavior; light entrainment; non-canonical circadian oscillator; operant; reward.

Grants and funding

This study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health R01NS114527 and the National Science Foundation IOS-1931115 awarded to SY.