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Clock-Talk: Interactions between Central and Peripheral Circadian Oscillators in Mammals
Author(s) -
Ueli Schibler,
Ivana Gotić,
Camille Saini,
Pascal Gos,
Thomas Curie,
Yann Emmenegger,
Flore Sinturel,
Pauline Gosselin,
Alan Gerber,
Fabienne Fleury-Olela,
Gianpaolo Rando,
Maud Demarque,
Paul Franken
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cold spring harbor symposia on quantitative biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.615
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1943-4456
pISSN - 0091-7451
DOI - 10.1101/sqb.2015.80.027490
Subject(s) - circadian rhythm , peripheral , biological clock , circadian clock , neuroscience , biology , evolutionary biology , medicine
In mammals, including humans, nearly all physiological processes are subject to daily oscillations that are governed by a circadian timing system with a complex hierarchical structure. The central pacemaker, residing in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the ventral hypothalamus, is synchronized daily by photic cues transmitted from the retina to SCN neurons via the retinohypothalamic tract. In turn, the SCN must establish phase coherence between self-sustained and cell-autonomous oscillators present in most peripheral cell types. The synchronization signals (Zeitgebers) can be controlled more or less directly by the SCN. In mice and rats, feeding-fasting rhythms, which are driven by the SCN through rest-activity cycles, are the most potent Zeitgebers for the circadian oscillators of peripheral organs. Signaling through the glucocorticoid receptor and the serum response factor also participate in the phase entrainment of peripheral clocks, and these two pathways are controlled by the SCN independently of feeding-fasting rhythms. Body temperature rhythms, governed by the SCN directly and indirectly through rest-activity cycles, are perhaps the most surprising cues for peripheral oscillators. Although the molecular makeup of circadian oscillators is nearly identical in all cells, these oscillators are used for different purposes in the SCN and in peripheral organs.

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