Isolated individual foragers of Apis cerana japonica could be entrained und
er a light-dark cycle, and the predominant activity was concentrated to the
later part of the photophase. Foragers showed circadian rhythm under condi
tions of constant light and constant dark with free-running periods of more
and less than 24 hr, respectively. These observations indicated that A. ce
rana possesses a circadian clock controlling locomotor activity. To investi
gate the molecular mechanism underlying the circadian system we cloned cDNA
for a homolog of the clock gene period (per) from the honeybee by a PCR-st
rategy. The cloned per-cDNAs consisted of two types, alpha and beta, encodi
ng a putative protein of 1124 amino acids and 1116 amino acids, respectivel
y. The sequences of types alpha and beta were identical except that the for
mer possessed an additional 24 bp stretch corresponding to 8 amino acids in
the conserved C2 block. These two types were assumed to be differentially
spliced variants and found also in per cDNA of A. mellifera. In support of
this idea, Southern blotting experiments showed that per of A. cerana is a
single copy gene. RT-PCR analysis and subcloning of the products revealed t
hat the both types alpha and beta are expressed in the brain of the forager
. A quantitative RT-PCR assay by which the level of per mRNA in one single
brain can be detected was established. Per mRNA level showed daily oscillat
ion under a light-dark cycle with a change of the ratio of type alpha to be
ta.