Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Life Sciences Content

Researchers propose new molecule to explain circadian clock

next article
29.08.2007

The internal clock in living beings that regulates sleeping and waking patterns -- usually called the circadian clock -- has often befuddled scientists due to its mysterious time delays.

 

Molecular interactions that regulate the circadian clock happen within milliseconds, yet the body clock resets about every 24 hours. What, then, stretches the expression of the clock over such a relatively long period?


Cornell researchers have contributed to the answer, thanks to new mathematical models recently published.

In the August online edition of Public Library of Science (PLOS) Computational Biology, Cornell biomolecular engineer Kelvin Lee, in collaboration with graduate student Robert S. Kuczenski, Kevin C. Hong '05 and Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo of Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain, hypothesize that the accepted model of circadian rhythmicity may be missing a key link, based on a mathematical model of what happens during the sleeping/waking cycle in fruit flies.

"We didn't discover any new proteins or genes," Lee said. "We took all the existing knowledge, and we tried to organize it."

Using mathematical models initially created by Hong, who has since graduated, the team set out to map the molecular interactions of proteins called period and timeless -- widely known to be related to the circadian clock.

The group hypothesized that an extra, unknown protein would need to be inserted into the cycle with period and timeless, a molecule that Kuczenski named the focus-binding mediator, in order for the cycle to stretch to 24 hours.

Lee said many scientists are interested in studying the circadian clock, and not just to understand such concepts as jet lag -- fatigue induced by traveling across time zones. Understanding the body's biological cycle might, for example, lead to better timing of delivering chemotherapy, when the body would be most receptive, Lee said.

Press Relations Office | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.cornell.edu

next article

More articles from Life Sciences:

nachricht Scientists find new insight into genome of neglected malaria parasite
10.10.2008 | Emory University

nachricht Hodgkin lymphoma -- new characteristics discovered
10.10.2008 | Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Scientists find new insight into genome of neglected malaria parasite

10.10.2008 | Life Sciences

Hodgkin lymphoma -- new characteristics discovered

10.10.2008 | Life Sciences

Digital zebrafish embryo provides the first complete developmental blueprint of a vertebrate

10.10.2008 | Life Sciences