Biology 2672a Biological Clocks. Biological Rhythms.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TIMING RESPONSES IN ANIMALS Students can…. Explain why there are environmental rhythms Explain why plant and animal behaviours are linked to environmental.
Advertisements

US 8933 Relate aspects of animal behaviour to environmental factors
Biological Rhythms Endogenous: Endogenous: internal body clock Exogenous: Exogenous: controlled by environmental stimuli Most rhythms are endogenous but.
 SWBAT: Explain how timing and coordination of physiological and behavioral events are regulated by multiple mechanisms and involve interactions between.
1 BIOLOGICAL CLOCKS. 2 All organisms respond to different cycles. They respond to: All organisms respond to different cycles. They respond to: 1) annual.
Chapter 14.  Animals are the kingdom of multicellular eukaryotes that consume or eat their food.  Animals are divided into 2 main groups ◦ Those with.
External Factors and Plant Growth. Plant Growth Regulators The word hormone comes from the Greek word “To excite” and hormones stimulate biochemical activities.
Biological clocks Clock periods Clock mechanisms Circannual
Biological clocks Clock periods –Circannual –Circalunidian –Circadian Clock mechanisms –Entrainment –Neural location –Genetic basis.
BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS: IT’S A MATTER OF TIME Text: Rhythms of Life Russell Foster and Leon Kreitzman.
2.E.2 Regulation Timing and coordination of physiological events are regulated by multiple mechanisms.
By: Hayley Hicks Emily Cantu Ashley Cardwell By: Macey McWhorter Jack Harris.
Neurobiology of Circadian Rhythms Daniel J. Buysse, M.D. Professor of Psychiatry University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh.
Biological Rhythms: Circadian rhythms Aims To know the biological clock in control of the Circadian Rhythm To understand the difference between Endogeous.
POSSIBLE FUNCTIONS of the CIRCADIAN CLOCK IS IT IMPORTANT AT ALL? YES! POSSIBLE FUNCTIONS DAILY PROGRAMING of PHYSIOLOGY PHOTOPERIODIC REPRODUCTION ANIMAL.
Organisms use feedback mechanisms to maintain their internal environments and respond to external environmental changes.
42 Hormones and Their Actions In multicellular animals, nerve impulses provide electric signals; hormones provide chemical signals. Hormones are secreted.
Time-keeping System: Circadian Rhythms Helena Illnerová Institute of Physiology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Rep.
Circadian Rhythms Circa: from the Latin for “about” and Diem: From the Latin for “day”
BIOL30001 Reproductive Physiology Seasonal breeding – a matter of time Geoff Shaw Circadian and circannual rhythms Retino-hypothalamic tract Pineal and.
Biology 484 – Ethology Chapter 5b – Neurohormones.
Topic 12 – Rhythms, Stress, and Associated Hormones.
Biological rhythms
Biological Rhythms Animals. Definitions Biological clock is an internal timing system which continues without external time clues, and controls the time.
Chapter 5: Consciousness Body Rhythms & Mental States.
Chapter 10 & 11 – Rhythms, Stress and Associated Hormones.
Animal Behavior Hormones and Neurons. What are hormones? In animals... Molecules that circulate in blood Bind to receptors Cause something to happen i.e.,
Tidal rhythms (periods ~ 12.4 hours) fiddler crab foraging.
Biorhythm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Night sleep Night sleep Scientific facts By Prof. Afaf El-Ansary.
LEARNING GOAL: Use data to build a conceptual understanding that the presence and/or absence of light is important for controlling circadian and circannual.
Pineal Gland Ripple Ireland. Where is it located?  Between two hemispheres of brain  Tucked into groove where two rounded thalamic bodies join  Dorsal.
Biological timing responses in animals. Biological Clocks Used by animals for: Controlling daily rhythms, e.g. sleep Synchronising breeding times Predicting.
 Organisms need a method of sleeping and waking in constant conditions.  Need to be able to predict timing of events like migration and hibernation.
Responses of organisms to abiotic factors (This is an overview. Later we will go into more details with examples of plants and animals)
Chapter 39 Plant Responses to External and Internal Signals.
LEARNING GOAL: Use data to build a conceptual understanding that the presence and/or absence of light is important for controlling circadian and circannual.
Topic 6.6 Hormones & Homeostasis. The Endocrine System Hormones are chemical messengers secreted directly into the blood. They are carried to the target.
Biological Rhythms 2: Infradian Describe and evaluate research into infradian rhythms Give examples of Infradian Rhythms.
Chapter 13.  Feeding and drinking  Patterns in metabolism  Migratory and reproductive cycles  Sleeping and waking cycles  Hibernation cycles  Periodic.
Questions: On a college day, what time do you go to sleep and what time do you wake up? How much sleep do you have on a college night? How do you feel.
 Consciousness is awareness of yourself and your environment.  Biological Rhythms  These are periodic physiological fluctuations.  Can affect physiological.
TIMING RESPONSES Continued…. COMPOUND RHYTHMS  The environment changes most on a shoreline because the cycle of day and night occurs as well as the tidal.
Biological Rhythms Repeated rhythms in animals which control the body or behaviour and synchronise the organism with the environment.
By: Jeffery Jarmusik and Andrew McCurrach
Pineal gland and Melatonin Lecture NO:2nd MBBS
Warm-Up (2/22) Explain how plants obtain energy from sunlight.
Neuronal Control of Behavior
Behaviors Governed by circadian & Circannual rhythm
How does an animal organize its priorities?
BIOLOGICAL CLOCKS.
Hormones and Neurons Organize Behavior
Biological Rhythms These are patterns of activity in animals and plants Circadian (24 hours) Infradian (more than 24 hours) Ultradian (less than 24 hours)
AQA BioPsychology Biological rhythms.
Warm-Up Explain how plants obtain energy from sunlight.
Timing and Coordination of Behaviors/Responses
Michael W Young  Trends in Biochemical Sciences 
Daily and Seasonal Timing
Melatonin and Sleep.
Regulation of melatonin production and receptor function.
The Network of Time: Understanding the Molecular Circadian System
Ez and EP recap.
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages (September 2003)
Circannual Clocks: Annual Timers Unraveled in Sheep
Biological rhythms.
Hibernation Proteins: Preparing for Life in the Freezer
Ayurveda Biology Transcending the science of Life
Plant responses to Internal and External Stimuli
Photoperiodism in birds
Animal Notes Chapter 14.
Presentation transcript:

Biology 2672a Biological Clocks

Biological Rhythms

Kinds of biological rhythms Daily – Circadian – Infradian – Circatidal Longer term – Circannual – Circalunar

Biological rhythms are often entrained to an external cue ‘Free-running’ – Without external cue Zeitgeber – German: “time-giver” – The external cue

A free-running circadian cycle in flying squirrels Black bars indicate periods of activity In the absence of external cues, many circadian rhythms are >24 h long...

But they are tightly linked when entrained by light/dark

How do the endogenous rhythms work? Cyclic expression of genes Clock, period, timeless, cryptochrome The products of these genes mediate other effects in the organism

Timekeeping in mammals...See also Figure per and cry transcription PER + CRY protein complex Clock BMAL1 clock gene transcription Bmal1 gene transcription Signalling in rest of body = physiological responses rev-erbα REV-ERBα Protein is a transcription factor Breaks down in a time-dependent manner

Clock genes (in words) Clock-BMAL1 heterodimers increase production of per and cry PER+CRY complexes inhibit the Clock-BMAL1 heterodimer... But break down in a time dependent manner – ie: the inhibitory effect only lasts a while Clock-BMAL1 heterodimers affect physiological responses (circadian responses) – Also self-regulating via rev-erbα These cycles of breakdown and production occur on a circadian basis, providing the basis for the circadian rhythm

The cells that do the timekeeping in mammals are located in the Suprachiasmatic Nuclei

If the SCN is removed, the circadian rhythm breaks down SCN removed here

How are they entrained? Daylength cues to the brain Hypothalamus Pineal Melatonin release (inhibited by light)

Melatonin cycles Retinal cells that sense light are not normal visual cells – ‘Blind’ animals like blind mole rat still respond to photoperiod – Specific opsin molecules (melanopsin) In the Pineal, melatonin production is controlled by – Light-dependent control of NAT (rodents) (n-acetyl transgferase, the rate limiting enzyme in production of melatonin) – Light-dependent breakdown of NAT (ungulates)

Tuatara Sphenodon Tuatara have a ‘pineal eye’ – a direct way for light to influence brain structures.

Cycles in Melatonin send day/night signals to other tissues in the body Melatonin Titre Midnight

The melatonin production cycle is easily interrupted by a burst of light

How do mammals know what season it is? Melatonin Titre Midnight Winter: Long night (Melatonin elevated for a long time) Summer: Short night (Melatonin elevated for a short time)

Melatonin signals are decoded in the pituitary gland Calendar cells measure length of melatonin burst against clock gene cycles Then regulate pituitary production of (e.g.) gonadotropin, luteinising hormone, leptin, prolactin etc. that control seasonal endocrine changes.

Effects are species-specific Hamster Sheep

There is generally a ‘critical photoperiod’ Most vertebrates are measuring whether the daylength is longer or shorter than the critical photoperiod – Often h light – Some insects measure length of day, others measure changing daylength

Local timing is essential Determines when animals become active, migrate – Timing with food resources and bad weather Mismatched timing with seasonality can be a cause of failure for introduced species – Insect biocontrol agents don’t know when winter will end – Ungulate populations get timing of birth wrong

Pitcher plant mosquitoes: critical photoperiod differs with latitude (longer in north, where growing seasons are shorter) Length of critical photoperiod has been decreasing as a result of natural selection by climate change Altitude-corrected latitude

Reading for Tuesday Diving Mammals – Pp