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Results 451 - 500 of 987
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Cashmore Anthony R - - 2003
Cryptochromes are flavin-containing blue light photoreceptors related to photolyases-they are found in both plants and animals and have recently been described for bacteria. In plants, cryptochromes perform a variety of functions including the entrainment of circadian rhythms. They serve a similar role in Drosophila and mammals, where the cryptochromes also ...
Quintero Jorge E - - 2003
The circadian clock nucleus of the mammalian brain is composed of thousands of oscillator neurons, each driven by the cell-autonomous action of a defined set of circadian clock genes. A critical question is how these individual oscillators are organized into an internal clock that times behavior and physiology. We examined ...
Fontanini Alfredo - - 2003
The occurrence of low frequency (<1.5 Hz) cerebral cortical oscillations during slow-wave sleep has recently lead to the suggestion that this pattern of activity is specifically associated with conditions in which the brain is mostly closed to external inputs and running on its own. In the current experiments, we used ...
Carr Amanda Jayne F - - 2003
In many seasonally breeding rodents, reproduction and metabolism are activated by long summer days (LD) and inhibited by short winter days (SD). After several months of SD, animals become refractory to this inhibitory photoperiod and spontaneously revert to LD-like physiology. The suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) house the primary circadian oscillator in ...
Vansteensel Mariska J - - 2003
The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the anterior hypothalamus contains a major circadian pacemaker that imposes or entrains rhythmicity on other structures by generating a circadian pattern in electrical activity. The identification of "clock genes" within the SCN and the ability to dynamically measure their rhythmicity by using transgenic animals open ...
Saeb-Parsy K - - 2003
Conventional extracellular recordings were made from single cells in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) region of the anaesthetized rat. Each cell was tested for its response to stimulation at three sites; the contralateral optic nerve, the ipsilateral supraoptic nucleus (SON) or the ipsilateral arcuate nucleus (ARC) to determine whether the behaviour ...
Van Gelder Russell N - - 2003
A subset of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells transduce information about ambient lighting conditions to areas of the brain involved in tasks including entrainment of the circadian clock, pupillary light reflexes and melatonin synthesis. The phototransduction system(s) utilized by these cells are unknown. Melanopsin and cryptochromes have been proposed as ...
Lockley Steven W - - 2003
The endogenous circadian oscillator in mammals, situated in the suprachiasmatic nuclei, receives environmental photic input from specialized subsets of photoreceptive retinal ganglion cells. The human circadian pacemaker is exquisitely sensitive to ocular light exposure, even in some people who are otherwise totally blind. The magnitude of the resetting response to ...
Schultz Thomas F - - 2003
The rotation of the earth results in regular changes in the light environment, and organisms have evolved a molecular oscillator that allows them to anticipate these changes. This daily molecular oscillator, known as the circadian clock, regulates a diverse array of physiologies across a wide variety of organisms. This review ...
Pinaud Raphael - - 2003
In the present study, immunocytochemistry was used to assess the expression of Egr-1 nuclear protein across selected regions of the opossum visual system. In light-deprived (LD) animals, only a few scattered cell nuclei were found throughout the striate cortex (V1). Exposure to light promoted a significant increase in the density ...
Nagano Mamoru - - 2003
The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is the neuroanatomical locus of the mammalian circadian pacemaker. Here we demonstrate that an abrupt shift in the light/dark (LD) cycle disrupts the synchronous oscillation of circadian components in the rat SCN. The phases of the RNA cycles of the period genes Per1 and Per2 and ...
Dudley Carol A - - 2003
Animal behavior is synchronized to the 24-hour light:dark (LD) cycle by regulatory programs that produce circadian fluctuations in gene expression throughout the body. In mammals, the transcription factor CLOCK controls circadian oscillation in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the brain; its paralog, neuronal PAS domain protein 2 (NPAS2), performs a similar ...
Korf H W - - 2003
The circadian system (CS) comprises three key components: (1) endogenous oscillators (clocks) generating a circadian rhythm; (2) input pathways entraining the circadian rhythm to the astrophysical day; and (3) output pathways distributing signals from the oscillator to the periphery. This contribution briefly reviews some general aspects ofthe organization of the ...
Roenneberg Till - - 2003
The circadian system actively synchronizes the temporal sequence of biological functions with the environment. The oscillatory behavior of the system ensures that entrainment is not passive or driven and therefore allows for great plasticity and adaptive potential. With the tools at hand, we now can concentrate on the most important ...
Maderson P F A - - 2003
A 1972 model for the evolutionary origin of hair suggested a primary mechanoreceptor role improving behavioral thermoregulation contributed to the success of late Paleozoic mammal-like reptiles. An insulatory role appeared secondarily subsequent to protohair multiplication. That model is updated in light of new data on (a) palaeoecology of mammalian ancestors; ...
Challet Etienne - - 2003
The suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus contain the master circadian clock in mammals. Nocturnal light pulses that reset the circadian clock also lead to rapid increases in levels of Per1 and Per2 mRNA in the SCN, suggesting that these genes are involved in the synchronization to light. During the ...
Millar Andrew J - - 2003
Circadian rhythms in plants are relatively robust, as they are maintained both in constant light of high fluence rates and in darkness. Plant circadian clocks exhibit the expected modes of photoentrainment, including period modulation by ambient light and phase resetting by brief light pulses. Several of the phytochrome and cryptochrome ...
Meijer Johanna H - - 2003
Within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the mammalian hypothalamus is a circadian pacemaker that functions as a clock. Its endogenous period is adjusted to the external 24-h light-dark cycle, primarily by light-induced phase shifts that reset the pacemaker's oscillation. Evidence using a wide variety of neurobiological and molecular genetic tools ...
Albrecht Urs - - 2003
Organisms populating the earth are under the steady influence of daily and seasonal changes resulting from the planet's rotation and orbit around the sun. This periodic pattern most prominently manifested by the light-dark cycle has led to the establishment of endogenous circadian timing systems that synchronize biological functions to the ...
Ashmore Lesley J - - 2003
The Drosophila circadian clock is an ideal model system for teasing out the molecular mechanisms of circadian behavior and the means by which animals synchronize to day-night cycles. The clock that drives behavioral rhythms, located in the lateral neurons in the central brain, consists of a feedback loop of the ...
Magnone Maria Chiara - - 2003
By using immunocytochemistry we tested whether neurotransmitters, and enzymes specific to neurotransmitters synthesis are rhythmically expressed in the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus of Ruin lizards Podarcis sicula either kept in light-dark cycles or constant darkness. Within the suprachiasmatic nuclei, prominent 24 h rhythms under 12:12 light-dark cycles were found ...
Froy Oren - - 2003
Migratory monarch butterflies use a time-compensated Sun compass to navigate to their overwintering grounds in Mexico. Here, we report that constant light, which disrupts circadian clock function at both the behavioral and molecular levels in monarchs, also disrupts the time-compensated component of flight navigation. We further show that ultraviolet light ...
Michael Todd P - - 2003
Circadian rhythms are widespread in nature and reflect the activity of an endogenous biological clock. In metazoans, the circadian system includes a central circadian clock in the brain as well as distinct clocks in peripheral tissues such as the retina or liver. Similarly, plants have distinct clocks in different cell ...
Warren Erin J - - 2003
In mammals, light entrainment of the circadian clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), requires retinal input. Traditional rod and cone photoreceptors, however, are not required. Instead, the SCN-projecting retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) function as autonomous photoreceptors and exhibit light responses independent of rod- and cone-driven input. Using whole-cell patch-clamp ...
Sharma Vijay Kumar - - 2003
Circadian clocks with characteristic period (tau) can be entrained to light/dark (LD) cycles by means of(i) phase shifts which are due to D/L "dawn" and/or L/D "dusk" transitions, (ii) period changes associated with long-term light exposure, or (iii) by combinations of the above possibilities. Based on stability analysis of a ...
Fukuhara Chiaki - - 2003
Most of the organisms living on earth show 24 hour (circadian) rhythms that are endogenously controlled by biological clocks. In mammals, these rhythms are generated by the circadian pacemaker located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus. However, recent studies have demonstrated that circadian oscillators can be found in ...
Challet Etienne - - 2003
The molecular clockwork in mammals involves various clock genes with specific temporal expression patterns. Synchronization of the master circadian clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is accomplished mainly via daily resetting of the phase of the clock by light stimuli. Phase shifting responses to light are correlated with induction ...
Muñoz Estela - - 2003
Life on earth has evolved on a photic carousel, spinning through alternating periods of light and darkness. This playful image belies the fact that only those organisms that learned how to benefit from the recurring features in their environment were allowed to ride on. This selection process has engendered many ...
Challet Etienne - - 2003
The master circadian clock is located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) in mammals. The most powerful synchronizer of the SCN clock is the daily variation in light intensity. Several other nonphotic cues are well known to be able to shift or synchronize the circadian clock in the absence of photic ...
Oster Henrik - - 2003
In mammals, the master circadian clock that drives many biochemical, physiological, and behavioral rhythms is located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus. Generation and maintenance of circadian rhythmicity rely on complex interlocked transcriptional/translational feedback loops involving a set of clock genes. Among the molecular components driving the mammalian ...
Tamai T Katherine - - 2003
The identification of specific clock-containing structures has been a major endeavour of the circadian field for many years. This has lead to the identification of many key components of the circadian system, including the suprachiasmatic nucleus in mammals, and the eyes and pineal glands in lower vertebrates. However, the idea ...
Mealey-Ferrara Marion L - - 2003
"For every behavioral observation, there is an equal and opposite observation." S. Benzer Photoreception is an important component of rhythm systems and is involved in adjusting circadian clocks to photic features of daily cycles. In Drosophila, it has been suggested that there are three light input pathways to the clock ...
Negroni Julia - - 2003
The mole rat, Cryptomys hottentotus (Bathyergidae) is a gregarious subterranean rodent, which shows no entrainment to ambient light-dark cycles. The locomotor activity of individuals or of a whole colony, which shows no circadian rhythmicity. Since the lack of both synchronization to light-dark cycle and an endogenous rhythm of locomotor activity ...
Gamble Karen L - - 2003
Light resets the circadian clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) during the night and inhibits the ability of non-photic stimuli, such as injection of muscimol, to reset the clock during the day. Since activation of NMDA receptors appears to mediate the effects of light in the SCN, we investigated whether ...
Kim Jae-Yean - - 2003
The transcription factor LHY and the related protein CCA1 perform overlapping functions in a regulatory feedback loop that is closely associated with the circadian oscillator of Arabidopsis: Overexpression of LHY abolished function of the circadian clock in constant light, but rhythmic expression of several circadian clock-regulated transcripts was observed under ...
Katayama Mitsunori - - 2003
We generated random transposon insertion mutants to identify genes involved in light input pathways to the circadian clock of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942. Two mutants, AMC408-M1 and AMC408-M2, were isolated that responded to a 5-h dark pulse differently from the wild-type strain. The two mutants carried independent transposon ...
Lall G S - - 2003
Circadian rhythms can be phase shifted by photic and non-photic stimuli. The circadian clock, anatomically defined as the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), can be phase delayed by light during the early subjective night and phase advanced during the late subjective night. Non-photic stimuli reset the clock when presented during the subjective ...
Beaulé Christian - - 2003
The circadian clock cells of the mammalian suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) generate oscillations in physiology and behavior that are synchronized (entrained) by the external light/dark (LD) cycle. The mechanisms that mediate the effect of light on the core molecular mechanism of the clock are not well understood, but evidence suggests that ...
Archibald Melanie S - - 2003
BACKGROUND: The photic sneeze response is a well-established clinical phenomenon in which patients respond by sneezing in an uncontrolled manner. This paroxysm of sneezing is evoked by a sudden exposure to an intense or bright light source. The pathogenesis of this response is apparently quite complex. Sudden exposure to bright ...
Caldelas I - - 2003
The molecular mechanisms of the mammalian circadian clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus have been essentially studied in nocturnal species. Currently, it is not clear if the clockwork and the synchronizing mechanisms are similar between diurnal and nocturnal species. Here we investigated in a day-active rodent Arvicanthis ansorgei, some of ...
Panda Satchidananda - - 2003
The rotation of our planet results in daily changes in light and darkness, as well as seasons with characteristic photoperiods. Adaptation to these daily and seasonal changes in light properties (and associated changes in the environment) is important to the sustained survival of higher life forms on our planet. Many ...
Sharma Vijay Kumar - - 2003
The movements of the lateral leaflets of the Indian telegraph plant Desmodium gyrans (L. F.) DC, have earlier been studied in detail with regards to the effects of chemicals, DC currents, and static magnetic fields. In the present paper we have discussed the oscillation of the lateral leaflets under the ...
Van Gelder Russell N - - 2003
Nearly all circadian clocks have free-running periods that differ significantly from 24 hours. To maintain synchrony with the 24 h day, the mammalian circadian clock is reset by light. Unlike other animals, mammalian circadian entrainment occurs exclusively via the eyes and optic nerves. Remarkably, the classical photoreceptors--the rods and cones--are ...
Edelstein K - - 2003
Both photic and nonphotic stimuli entrain circadian rhythms. Although the adaptive significance of nonphotic clock resetting is unknown, one possibility is that nonphotic cues modulate circadian responses to light. Results of studies on the interaction between photic and nonphotic stimuli support this idea. During the day, light blocks the effects ...
Sudo M - - 2003
Constant light (LL) or constant dark (DD) environmental lighting conditions cause a free-running period and activity reduction in the rodent behavioral circadian rhythm. In order to understand the molecular process underlying behavioral rhythms in LL or DD housing conditions, we examined the circadian profile of mPer2 mRNA and mPER2 in ...
Glass J D - - 2003
The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) prominently expresses polysialic acid (PSA), a carbohydrate polymer that is attached to neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) and promotes changes in cell interactions. Previous studies have shown that expression of PSA is important for circadian rhythm stability under constant darkness, and for photic entrainment of the ...
Cermakian Nicolas - - 2003
Circadian rhythms are regulated by clocks located in specific structures of the CNS, such as the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in mammals, and by peripheral oscillators present in various other tissues. The expression of essential clock genes oscillates both in the SCN and in peripheral pacemakers. Peripheral tissues in the fly ...
Beaulé Christian - - 2003
In mammals, circadian rhythms are generated by a light-entrainable oscillator located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Light signals reach the SCN via a dedicated retinal pathway, the retinohypothalamic tract (RHT). One question that continues to elude scientists is whether the circadian system has its own dedicated photoreceptor or photoreceptors. ...
Panda Satchidananda - - 2002
The master circadian oscillator in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus is entrained to the day/night cycle by retinal photoreceptors. Melanopsin (Opn4), an opsin-based photopigment, is a primary candidate for photoreceptor-mediated entrainment. To investigate the functional role of melanopsin in light resetting of the oscillator, we generated melanopsin-null mice (Opn4-/-). These mice ...
Albrecht Urs - - 2002
The behavior of mammals is characterized by a 24-h cycle of rest and activity which is a fundamental adaption to the solar cycle of light and darkness. The pacemaker of this circadian clock is localized in the ventral part of the hypothalamus, the so-called suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), and is entrained ...
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