Getting Through to Circadian Oscillators: Why Use Constant Routines?
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Biological Rhythms
- Vol. 17 (1) , 4-13
- https://doi.org/10.1177/074873002129002294
Abstract
Overt 24-h rhythmicity is composed of both exogenous and endogenous components, reflecting the product of multiple (periodic) feedback loops with a core pacemaker at their center. Researchers attempting to reveal the endogenous circadian (near 24-h) component of rhythms commonly conduct their experiments under constant environmental conditions. However, even under constant environmental conditions, rhythmic changes in behavior, such as food intake or the sleep-wake cycle, can contribute to observed rhythmicity in many physiological and endocrine variables. Assessment of characteristics of the core circadian pacemaker and its direct contribution to rhythmicity in different variables, including rhythmicity in gene expression, may be more reliable when such periodic behaviors are eliminated or kept constant across all circadian phases. This is relevant for the assessment of the status of the circadian pacemaker in situations in which the sleep-wake cycle or food intake regimes are altered because of external conditions, such as in shift work or jet lag. It is also relevant for situations in which differences in overt rhythmicity could be due to changes in either sleep oscillatory processes or circadian rhythmicity, such as advanced or delayed sleep phase syndromes, in aging, or in particular clinical conditions. Researchers studying human circadian rhythms have developed constant routine protocols to assess the status of the circadian pacemaker in constant behavioral and environmental conditions, whereas this technique is often thought to be unnecessary in the study of animal rhythms. In this short review, the authors summarize constant routine methodology and what has been learned from constant routines and argue that animal and human circadian rhythm researchers should (continue to) use constant routines as a step on the road to getting through to central and peripheral circadian oscillators in the intact organism.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- A neural circuit for circadian regulation of arousalNature Neuroscience, 2001
- Circadian Expression of Clock Genes in Human Oral Mucosa and SkinThe American Journal of Pathology, 2001
- Circadian Clock Resetting by Sleep Deprivation without Exercise in the Syrian HamsterJournal of Neuroscience, 2000
- Individual differences in the phase and amplitude of the human circadian temperature rhythm: with an emphasis on morningness–eveningnessJournal of Sleep Research, 2000
- Posture influences melatonin concentrations in plasma and saliva in humansNeuroscience Letters, 1994
- The Statistical Analysis of Circadian Phase and Amplitude in Constant-Routine Core-Temperature DataJournal of Biological Rhythms, 1992
- A single pacemaker can produce different rates of reentrainment in different overt rhythmsJournal of Sleep Research, 1992
- Bright Light Resets the Human Circadian Pacemaker Independent of the Timing of the Sleep-Wake CycleScience, 1986
- Exogenous and Endogenous Components in Circadian RhythmsCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1960
- Einige allgemeine Gesetzm igkeiten physikalischer TemperaturregulationPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1947