Chronomics complement, among many other fields, genomics and proteomics.
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Citation
Chronomics complement, among many other fields, genomics and proteomics. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2001 Jan; 22(1): 53-73
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Chronomics complement, among many other fields, genomics and proteomics. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2001 Jan; 22(1): 53-73
: It is well known that plasma levels of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), a steroid hormone secreted by zona reticularis (ZR) of the adrenal cortex, reach the maximal values in the third decade of life and then gradually decline with age. Moreover, the DHEA deficiency is probably responsible for several functional disturbances connected with aging. It was also found that ZR reaches its definitive volume at puberty and undergoes selective atrophy during the aging. Thus, the decline of DHEA may be a simple consequence of ZR atrophy in aged subjects. A hypothesis presented here attempts to explain the mechanism of the age-related ZR atrophy and is based on the adrenal cortex cell kinetics. In the adrenal cortex the cell proliferation indices are lower when we pass from zona glomerulosa (ZG) to the inner zones and are the lowest in ZR. In contrast, the apoptotic index is the highest in ZR. It is suggested that adrenocortical cells renew from the progenitor cells located in ZG /zona fasculata boundary and /or in subcapsular layer. These cells migrate centripetally undergoing the subsequent steps of differention and consecutive divisions - and - if not die en route - reach the most central localization in ZR. In consequence, ZR includes the "oldest" adrenocortical cells which probably in majority reached the "Hayflick's number" and cannot divide. This results in the preponderance of apoptosis over proliferation leading to progressive ZR atrophy followed by a decline of secretion of ZR-derived steroid hormones....
Pawlikowski M. Adrenal cortex -- the next biological clock? Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2005 Jun; 26(3): 193-195
: In mammals including man, the most important zeitgeber for endogenous rhythms is the environmental light/dark cycle. Mammals perceive light through the eyes and that perception is relayed to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) by means of neuronal signals. The SCN, in turn, innervates the pineal gland, resulting in the production and release of melatonin almost exclusively during night-time hours. Thus, besides object recognition, eyes serve as the sensory organ for detecting the presence or absence of light. The way that light entrains the SCN is still a matter of intense research. It has been shown, for example, that the light intensities required for affecting melatonin rhythms are much higher than the intensities needed for object identification. On the other hand, even in rodents who completely lack the "classical" photoreceptors of the retina, their endogenous rhythms still can be synchronized by normal light/dark cycles. These two observations led to the hypothesis that there must be photoreceptors, apart from the known (object-identifying) retinal photoreceptors, which are responsible for the entrainment of internal rhythms. Very recently, a number of reports showed that in fact a completely new type of retinal photoreceptor, located in ganglion cells, may be responsible for entraining the SCN. It contains a photopigment, melanopsin, which shares homologies with rhodopsin, but also is evolutionarily older. Compared to rods or cones, the melanopsin-containing neurons are rare, but evenly distributed within the retina, indicating that they serve as a global, integrating light sensor. These ganglion cells apparently project directly into the SCN. Taken together, these new developments in photo-chronobiology open new areas of research. It will be of special interest, for example, to determine how the photosensitive ganglion cells and their dendrites integrate the environmental light stimuli....
Lerchl A. Biological rhythms in the context of light at night (LAN). Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2002 Jul; 23(Suppl 2): 23-27
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Halberg F, Cornélissen G, Katinas G, Hillman D, Schwartzkopff O, . Chronomics complement, among many other fields, genomics and proteomics. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2001 Jan; 22(1): 53-73