The sigmoidally transformed cosine curve: a mathematical model for circadian rhythms with symmetric non-sinusoidal shapes

2006 ◽  
Vol 25 (22) ◽  
pp. 3893-3904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew R. Marler ◽  
Philip Gehrman ◽  
Jennifer L. Martin ◽  
Sonia Ancoli-Israel
Biosystems ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marit Pedersen ◽  
Anders Johnsson

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 645-657
Author(s):  
Semra Foster ◽  
Tom Christiansen ◽  
Michael C. Antle

While circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior demonstrate remarkable day-to-day precision, they are also able to exhibit plasticity in a variety of parameters and under a variety of conditions. After-effects are one type of plasticity in which exposure to non–24-h light-dark cycles (T-cycles) will alter the animal’s free-running rhythm in subsequent constant conditions. We use a mathematical model to explore whether the concept of synaptic plasticity can explain the observation of after-effects. In this model, the SCN is composed of a set of individual oscillators randomly selected from a normally distributed population. Each cell receives input from a defined set of oscillators, and the overall period of a cell is a weighted average of its own period and that of its inputs. The influence that an input has on its target’s period is determined by the proximity of the input cell’s period to the imposed T-cycle period, such that cells with periods near T will have greater influence. Such an arrangement is able to duplicate the phenomenon of after-effects, with relatively few inputs per cell (~4-5) being required. When the variability of periods between oscillators is low, the system is quite robust and results in minimal after-effects, while systems with greater between-cell variability exhibit greater magnitude after-effects. T-cycles that produce maximal after-effects have periods within ~2.5 to 3 h of the population period. Overall, this model demonstrates that synaptic plasticity in the SCN network could contribute to plasticity of the circadian period.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruby Kim ◽  
Michael C. Reed

Abstract Background The superchiasmatic nucleus (SCN) serves as the primary circadian (24hr) clock in mammals and is known to control important physiological functions such as the sleep-wake cycle, hormonal rhythms, and neurotransmitter regulation. Experimental results suggest that some of these functions reciprocally influence circadian rhythms, creating a highly complex network. Among the clock’s downstream products, orphan nuclear receptors REV-ERB and ROR are particularly interesting because they coordinately modulate the core clock circuitry. Recent experimental evidence shows that REV-ERB and ROR are not only crucial for lipid metabolism but are also involved in dopamine (DA) synthesis and degradation, which could have meaningful clinical implications for conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and mood disorders. Methods We create a mathematical model consisting of differential equations that express how the circadian variables are influenced by light, how REV-ERB and ROR feedback to the clock, and how REV-ERB, ROR, and BMAL1-CLOCK affect the dopaminergic system. The structure of the model is based on the findings of experimentalists. Results We compare our model predictions to experimental data on clock components in different light-dark conditions and in the presence of genetic perturbations. Our model results are consistent with experimental results on REV-ERB and ROR and allow us to predict the circadian variations in tyrosine hydroxylase and monoamine oxidase seen in experiments. By connecting our model to an extant model of dopamine synthesis, release, and reuptake, we are able to predict circadian oscillations in extracellular DA and homovanillic acid that correspond well with experimental observations. Conclusions The predictions of the mathematical model are consistent with a wide variety of experimental observations. Our calculations show that the mechanisms proposed by experimentalists by which REV-ERB, ROR, and BMAL1-CLOCK influence the DA system are sufficient to explain the circadian oscillations observed in dopaminergic variables. Our mathematical model can be used for further investigations of the effects of the mammalian circadian clock on the dopaminergic system. The model can also be used to predict how perturbations in the circadian clock disrupt the dopaminergic system and could potentially be used to find drug targets that ameliorate these disruptions.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard H. Rand ◽  
Erika T. Wirkus ◽  
Tong Li ◽  
Howard C. Howland

Abstract Circadian rhythms in vertebrates (including man) have been conjectured to help control changes in sensitivity of visual systems (which must operate over some 10 orders of magnitude in the course of night and day), by anticipating the changes in light intensity which occur at dusk and dawn (Cahill and Besharse, 1995). Diurnal rhythms in melatonin and dopamine in the retina have been shown to be affected both by a circadian oscillator as well as by changes in local light levels (Cahill and Besharse, 1995). In an experiment conducted in the laboratory of one of the authors (HCH), the growth of the eyes of baby chicks in their first two weeks of life has been shown to be strongly affected by exposure to 20 hours or more of light per day (Li et al., 2000). A descriptive model of the nature of the biochemistry of retinal dynamics has been presented (Morgan and Boelen, 1996). In this work we offer a mathematical model of the retinal oscillator based on the descriptive model given in (Morgan and Boelen, 1996). Using this model we simulate the experiment described in (Li et al., 2000).


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