Original title: Periferní cirkadiánní hodiny savců, jejich molekulární mechanismus a synchronizace
Translated title: Mammalian circadian clock in peripheral organs, molecular mechanism and entrainment
Authors: Polidarová, Lenka ; Kuthan, Martin (referee) ; Sumová, Alena (advisor)
Document type: Master’s theses
Year: 2008
Language: cze
Abstract: Mammalian circadian clock in peripheral organs, molecular mechanism and entrainment The circadian system controls timing of behavioral and physiological processes in most organisms. In mammals, central oscillator is located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the anterior hypothalamus. Apart from the SCN, peripheral oscillators are located in numerous organs like liver, heart, lung, muscle, intestine etc. The central and peripheral oscillators need to be synchronized by external cues (Zeitgeber). The SCN coordinates and entrains the phase of the clocks in numerous peripheral tissues via neuronal and humoral signals. For the SCN, dominant synchronizer is external light-dark cycle. Peripheral oscillators are cell-autonomous, they could work also independently of the SCN as a consequence of a feeding cycle. The basic molecular core clock mechanism responsible for generating circadian rhythms in the central and peripheral clocks is composed of transcriptional/translational feedback loops between the clock genes and their protein products. The aim of the present thesis was to ascertain whether the clock gene and protein expressions exhibit circadian rhythms in the rat intestine and whether the core clock mechanism drives expression of a cell cycle regulator rWee1. Next aim was to reveal how the circadian...

Institution: Charles University Faculties (theses) (web)
Document availability information: Available in the Charles University Digital Repository.
Original record: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/5454

Permalink: http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-295142


The record appears in these collections:
Universities and colleges > Public universities > Charles University > Charles University Faculties (theses)
Academic theses (ETDs) > Master’s theses
 Record created 2017-04-25, last modified 2022-03-04


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