Abstract The observation that cycles of sleep and wakefulness occur with a periodicity fixed in time to match the rotation of the Earth on its axis provided a key to unlock the first genetic code for a neurobehavioral pathway in flies and ultimately in mice. As a remarkable outcome of this discovery, we have gained an unprecedented view of the conserved genetic program that encodes a sense of time across all kingdoms of life. The tools are now in hand to begin to understand how important processes such as energy homeostasis and fuel utilization are coordinated to anticipate daily changes in environment caused by the rising and setting of the sun. A better understanding of the impact of circadian gene networks on nutrient balance at the molecular, cellular, and system levels promises to shed light on the emerging association between disorders of diabetes, obesity, sleep, and circadian timing.
24 hours TO EAT OR TO SLEEP? OREXIN IN THE REGULATION OF FEEDING AND WAKEFULNESS | |
| Jon T. Willie, Richard M. Chemelli, Christopher M. Sinton, Masashi Yanagisawa | |
| Annual Review of Neuroscience.
Volume 24,
Page 429-458,
2001 | |
| Abstract | Full Text | PDF (440 KB) |
| This review | |
|---|---|
| The Clockwork of Metabolism | |
| Kathryn Moynihan Ramsey, Biliana Marcheva, Akira Kohsaka, Joseph Bass | |
|
Volume 27,
Page 219-240,
2007 | |
The Brain, Appetite, and Obesity | |
| Hans-Rudolf Berthoud, Christopher Morrison | |
| Annual Review of Psychology.
Volume 59,
Page 55-92,
2008 | |
| Abstract | Full Text | PDF (684 KB) |
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