Endogenous pacemakers

Subdecks (1)

Cards (22)

  • What is one of the primary endogenous pacemakers in mammals?
    SCN
  • What does SCN stand for?
    Suprachiasmatic nucleus
  • What is the SCN?
    Tiny bundle of nerve cells
  • Where is the SCN located?
    Hypothalamus in each hemisphere
  • What does the SCN maintain? 

    Sleep/wake cycle
  • What is the optic chiasm?
    The area nerve fibres connect to the eye
  • How does the SCN receive information about light?
    From the optic chiasm
  • How does the biological clock adjust to changing daylight even while asleep?
    SCN receives information from optic chiasm even when asleep
  • How has the influence of the SCN been demonstrated?
    Animal studies
  • Who demonstrated the influence of the SCN through chipmunk studies?
    DeCoursey
  • What was the procedure in DeCoursey's study?
    Destroyed SCN connections in chipmunks and observed them for 80 days
  • How many chipmunks were in DeCoursey's study?
    30
  • How long did DeCoursey observe the chipmunks for?

    80 dats
  • What were the findings in DeCoursey's study?
    Sleep/wake cycle of chipmunks disappeared and significant proportion of them were killed by predators
  • Who demonstrated the influence of the SCN through 'mutant' hamster studies?
    Ralph
  • What was the procedure in Ralph's study?
    Bred 'mutant' hamsters with 20-hour sleep/wake cycle - then SCN cells transplanted into brains of normal hamsters
  • What was the findings in Ralph's study?
    Sleep/wake cycle in normal hamsters defaulted to 20 hours
  • Where does the SCN pass information about day length and light it receives to?

    Pineal gland
  • When does the pineal gland increase production of melatonin?
    Night
  • What is melatonin?
    A chemical that induces sleep
  • What has melatonin been suggested to be a causal factor in?
    Seasonal affective disorder