AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cycle of light and darkness prevailing on Earth. Under constant conditions of illumination and temperature, these internal biological rhythms persist with a period close to 1 day (“circadian”), but it is usually not exactly 24h. Recent discoveries have uncovered stunning similarities among the molecular circuitries of circadian clocks in mice, fruit flies, and bread molds. A consensus picture is coming into focus around two proteins (called PER and TIM in fruit flies), which dimerize and then inhibit transcription of their own genes. Although this picture seems to confirm a venerable model of circadian rhythms based on time-delayed negative feed...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
SummaryThe 24 hour molecular oscillator requires precisely calibrated degradation of core clock prot...
Almost all living organisms display rhythms in their activities coinciding with the day-night cycles...
AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cyc...
AbstractAll circadian clock genes discovered in Drosophila have mammalian counterparts with extensiv...
AbstractWe report the in vivo characterization of the Drosophila CLOCK protein (dCLOCK), a transcrip...
AbstractCircadian behavioral rhythms in Drosophila depend on the appropriate regulation of at least ...
PhDMost organisms display circadian rhythms of approximately 24 hours in many aspects of their phys...
AbstractWe have characterized a mammalian homolog of the Drosophila period gene and designated it Pe...
AbstractThe suprachiasmatic nucleus governs daily variations of physiology and behavior in mammals. ...
AbstractThe timeless gene is a second essential component of the circadian clock in Drosophila; its ...
AbstractThe mutation timelessULgenerates 33 hr rhythms, prolonged nuclear localization of PERIOD/TIM...
AbstractWe have isolated three alleles of a novel Drosophila clock gene, double-time (dbt). Short- (...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
SummaryThe 24 hour molecular oscillator requires precisely calibrated degradation of core clock prot...
Almost all living organisms display rhythms in their activities coinciding with the day-night cycles...
AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cyc...
AbstractAll circadian clock genes discovered in Drosophila have mammalian counterparts with extensiv...
AbstractWe report the in vivo characterization of the Drosophila CLOCK protein (dCLOCK), a transcrip...
AbstractCircadian behavioral rhythms in Drosophila depend on the appropriate regulation of at least ...
PhDMost organisms display circadian rhythms of approximately 24 hours in many aspects of their phys...
AbstractWe have characterized a mammalian homolog of the Drosophila period gene and designated it Pe...
AbstractThe suprachiasmatic nucleus governs daily variations of physiology and behavior in mammals. ...
AbstractThe timeless gene is a second essential component of the circadian clock in Drosophila; its ...
AbstractThe mutation timelessULgenerates 33 hr rhythms, prolonged nuclear localization of PERIOD/TIM...
AbstractWe have isolated three alleles of a novel Drosophila clock gene, double-time (dbt). Short- (...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
Circadian rhythms in pacemaker cells persist for weeks in constant darkness, while in other types of...
SummaryThe 24 hour molecular oscillator requires precisely calibrated degradation of core clock prot...
Almost all living organisms display rhythms in their activities coinciding with the day-night cycles...