Dissociation between two subgroups of the suprachiasmatic nucleus affected by the number of damped oscillated neurons.

Phys Rev E

Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Laboratory for Neurophysiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, 2300 RC, The Netherlands.

Published: March 2017

In mammals, the main clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the brain synchronizes the body rhythms to the environmental light-dark cycle. The SCN is composed of about 2×10^{4} neurons which can be classified into three oscillatory phenotypes: self-sustained oscillators, damped oscillators, and arrhythmic neurons. Exposed to an artificial external light-dark cycle with a period of 22h instead of 24h, two subgroups of the SCN can become desynchronized (dissociated). The ventrolateral (VL) subgroup receives photic input and is entrained to the external cycle and a dorsomedial (DM) subgroup oscillates with its endogenous (i.e., free running) period and is synchronized to the external light-dark cycle through coupling from the VL. In the present study, we examined the effects of damped oscillatory neurons on the dissociation between VL and DM under an external 22h cycle. We found that, with increasing numbers of damped oscillatory neurons located in the VL, the dissociation between the VL and DM emerges, but if these neurons are increasingly present in the DM the dissociation disappears. Hence, the damped oscillatory neurons in different subregions of the SCN play distinct roles in the dissociation between the two subregions of the SCN. This shows that synchrony between SCN subregions is affected by the number of damped oscillatory neurons and the location of these cells. We suggest that more knowledge on the number and the location of these cells may explain why some species do show a dissociation between the subregions and others do not, as the distribution of oscillatory types of neurons offers a plausible and novel candidate mechanism to explain heterogeneity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.95.032302DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

damped oscillatory
16
oscillatory neurons
16
light-dark cycle
12
neurons
9
suprachiasmatic nucleus
8
number damped
8
external light-dark
8
subregions scn
8
dissociation subregions
8
location cells
8

Similar Publications

Attenuation of progressive surface gravity waves by floating spheres.

Sci Rep

January 2025

Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CD, Delft, The Netherlands.

Laboratory experiments were performed to investigate the attenuation of progressive deep-water waves by a mono-layer of loose- and close-packed floating spheres. We measured the decay distance of waves having different incident wave frequency and steepness. The attenuation of waves was strong if the surface concentration of particles was close-packed, with the decay distance being shorter for incident waves with higher frequency and steepness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The spectra of internal friction and temperature dependencies of the frequency of a free-damped oscillation process excited in the specimens of an amorphous-crystalline copolymer of polyoxymethylene with the co-monomer trioxane (POM-C) with a degree of crystallinity ~60% in the temperature range from -150 °C to +170 °C has been studied. It has been established that the spectra of internal friction show five local dissipative processes of varying intensity, manifested in different temperature ranges of the spectrum. An anomalous decrease in the frequency of the oscillatory process was detected in the temperature ranges where the most intense dissipative losses appear on the spectrum of internal friction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Relaxation Phenomena in Low-Density and High-Density Polyethylene.

Polymers (Basel)

December 2024

Frumkin Institute of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences (IPCE RAS), Leninskiy Prospekt 31, 119071 Moscow, Russia.

A study was conducted on the internal friction spectra and temperature dependencies of the frequency of free damped oscillatory processes excited in the investigated samples of low-density polyethylene (LDPE) and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) over a temperature range from -150 °C to +150 °C. It was found that the internal friction spectra exhibit several local dissipative processes of varying intensity, which manifest in different temperature intervals. The structure of the internal friction spectra and the peaks of dissipative losses are complex, as evidenced by the occurrence of sharp, locally temperature-dependent jumps in the intensity of dissipative losses observed throughout the entire temperature range.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chemomechanical Self-Oscillatory Microgel Motility in Stratified Chemical Media.

Adv Mater

December 2024

Dynamic Colloidal Systems Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, 247667, India.

The design of chemomechanical self-oscillators, which execute oscillations in the presence of constant stimuli lacking periodicity, is a step toward the development of autonomous and interactive soft robotic systems. This work presents a simple design of prolonged chemomechanical oscillatory movement in a microgel system capable of buoyant motility within stratified chemical media containing spatially localized sinking and floating stimuli. Three design elements are developed: a stimuli-responsive membranized calcium alginate microgel, a Percoll density gradient for providing stratified antagonistic chemical media, and transduction of microgel particle size actuation into buoyant motility via membrane-mediated displacement of the Percoll media.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hyperballistic transport in dense systems of charged particles under ac electric fields.

Phys Rev E

November 2024

Department of Physics "A. Pontremoli, " University of Milan, via Celoria 16, 20133 Milan, Italy.

The Langevin equation is ubiquitously employed to numerically simulate plasmas, colloids, and electrolytes. However, the usual assumption of white noise becomes untenable when the system is subject to an external ac electric field. This is because the charged particles in the system, which provide the thermal bath for the particle transport, become themselves responsive to the ac field and the thermal noise is field dependent and non-Markovian.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!