Isle creature could offer clues to human immune systems
MILWAUKEE » Glowing bacteria in the tiny Hawaiian bobtail squid may shed new light on the role bacteria play in the human body to synchronize daily tasks such as sleeping and eating, and keeping the immune system healthy, research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison suggests.
Circadian rhythms — responsible for sleep cycles and other physiological and metabolic functions — have long been thought to be regulated mostly by exposure to light and darkness. The rhythms are important because disrupting the body’s internal clock by traveling to a different time zone, or by working a night shift, can contribute to sleep and immune system disorders, or conditions such as seasonal affective disorder.
If there’s a connection between circadian rhythm and bacteria in the human gut, it would provide further evidence of the need to be careful with antibiotics that kill bacteria that may be important to maintaining a healthy immune system, said Elizabeth Heath-Heckman, a UW-Madison graduate student and co-author of the squid research published this month in the journal mBiosphere.
"Nobody’s been able to show that bacteria may help regulate circadian rhythms," Heath-Heckman said recently. "There are a lot of people who research circadian rhythms in humans and their importance to maintaining immunity. People who disrupt their circadian rhythms have higher rates of heart disease and illness. Everything is intertwined."
The Hawaiian bobtail squid, about 2 inches long and a denizen of shallow ocean waters, challenges conventional thinking.
It turns out the squid’s internal clock, which tells it when to forage for food or to sleep, may not be solely governed by external light, but might also depend on the presence of the light-generating bacteria that live in its body, Madison scientists found. Future research may explore whether both light and the light-generating bacteria called Vibrio fischeri are necessary to correctly tell the squid’s internal clock when the animal should eat and sleep.
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The nocturnal squid has specialized proteins that reflect light given off by glowing bacteria that live in a special organ called the light organ in its belly. As the squid hunts near the ocean’s surface at night, its glowing bacteria work as a cloaking device, beaming light through its underbelly so its body doesn’t cast a shadow on the sea floor and alert hungry bottom-dwelling predators to a potential meal.
The predators see only sky; the squid is invisible.
The squid and its glowing bacteria have a daily rhythm.
In the morning, the squid expels 90 percent of the glowing bacteria, which are taken in and grown by other young squids. The squid then buries itself in the sand of the sea floor, with only its eyes peeking out, using its eight suckered arms and two tentacles to scoop up sand around it.
While resting during the day, it grows a new batch of bacteria that glow when they reach a certain concentration.
The bobtail squid has two genes that produce proteins that communicate the time of day to the rest of the animal’s body — one in the head, and one in the light organ, Heath-Heckman explained. The squid’s head tells time by the sun, but its light-generating organ might tell time by the glowing bacteria, she said.
"We’re beginning to realize that circadian rhythms are really important for health and that microbes are important for everything," added Margaret McFall-Ngai, a UW-Madison professor of medical microbiology and co-author of the research.
On the net
>> Video of the bobtail squid is available at: www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin.