Abstract
Corticosterone levels were determined in the 7-week-old male rat maintained under different feeding and lighting schedules. At 4 weeks of age, the animals were kept either under a natural photoperiod (LD) or were subjected to continuous illumination (LL). Access to food was either ad libitum or restricted to an 8 hr span per 24 hr (circadian) or 32 hr (acircadian).
The food signal seemed able to synchronize the corticosterone rhythm to its own circadian periodicity, irrespective of the lighting regimen. No synchronization was observed in serially sampled LL or LD rats under an acircadian feeding schedule. Instead, the group acrophase appeared 24 hr subsequent to food presentation. Regarding individual patterns, many rats showed an acrophase or a peak also at that time. We speculate that an endogenous circadian mechanism was reset by the food signal, whenever it appeared.