Literature DB >> 2421908

Does Gonyaulax polyedra measure a week?

G Cornelissen, H Broda, F Halberg.   

Abstract

Cell communication was investigated in Gonyaulax polyedra by mixing two cultures grown on opposite lighting regimens, as reported in a companion paper. Herein, using the same data, 7-d (circaseptan) rhythms are also shown to characterize the luminescence of this cellular organism. A fraction of a culture of G. polyedra, grown in 12 h of light (L), alternating with 12 h of darkness (D), was exposed for 3 d to an LD-shift by 11 h. The circadian glow rhythm was compared under free-running conditions (LL) for cultures previously kept on the two differing LD regimens and for mixed cultures. A circaseptan modulation of the circadian amplitude is detected in cultures that had not undergone an LD shift and in some of the mixed cultures, but not in the shifted cultures. A statistically significantly lower circaseptan amplitude (less than 50%) and acrophase advance of over 120 degrees or 56 h (p less than 0.001) characterizes the mixed cultures, as compared to the original unshifted cultures, a finding that could mean that G. polyedra communicates along a circaseptan frequency. Whether a prior phase-shift known to affect circaseptan behavior in another unicell, Acetabularia mediterranea, led to an alteration of the time structure of G. polyedra remains an interesting subject for further study in this model, a model attractive to students of unicellular rhythms and underlying mechanisms that henceforth should be studied at multiple circadian and circaseptan frequencies. Circadian and circaseptan interrelations can both serve as markers for mechanisms of intercellular communication.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 2421908     DOI: 10.1007/bf02788461

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Biophys        ISSN: 0163-4992


  10 in total

1.  When to treat.

Authors:  F Halberg
Journal:  Indian J Cancer       Date:  1975-03       Impact factor: 1.224

2.  The Intermittent Growth of Bacterial Cultures.

Authors:  L A Rogers; G R Greenbank
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1930-03       Impact factor: 3.490

3.  [Glossary of chronobiology (author's transl)].

Authors:  F Halberg; F Carandente; G Cornelissen; G S Katinas
Journal:  Chronobiologia       Date:  1977

Review 4.  Toward a chronotherapy of neoplasia: tolerance of treatment depends upon host rhythms.

Authors:  F Halberg; E Haus; S S Cardoso; L E Scheving; J F Kühl; R Shiotsuka; G Rosene; J E Pauly; W Runge; J F Spalding; J K Lee; R A Good
Journal:  Experientia       Date:  1973-08-15

Review 5.  The biology of circadian rhythms from man to micro-organism.

Authors:  J W Hastings
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1970-02-19       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 6.  Chronobiology.

Authors:  F Halberg
Journal:  Annu Rev Physiol       Date:  1969       Impact factor: 19.318

Review 7.  Quo vadis basic and clinical chronobiology: promise for health maintenance.

Authors:  F Halberg
Journal:  Am J Anat       Date:  1983-12

8.  Inferential statistical methods for estimating and comparing cosinor parameters.

Authors:  C Bingham; B Arbogast; G C Guillaume; J K Lee; F Halberg
Journal:  Chronobiologia       Date:  1982 Oct-Dec

9.  Circaseptan (about-7-day) bioperiodicity--spontaneous and reactive--and the search for pacemakers.

Authors:  F Levi; F Halberg
Journal:  Ric Clin Lab       Date:  1982 Apr-Jun

10.  Circadian temperature rhythm and circadian-circaseptan (about 7-day) aspects of murine death from malaria.

Authors:  S Sánchez de la Peña; F Halberg; H G Schweiger; J Eaton; J Sheppard
Journal:  Proc Soc Exp Biol Med       Date:  1984-02
  10 in total
  3 in total

1.  Chronobiologic approach to beat-to-beat variations of cultured murine myocardial cells.

Authors:  H Han; D Shao; J Wu; G Cornélissen; F Halberg
Journal:  Cell Biophys       Date:  1991-06

2.  Procedures for numerical analysis of circadian rhythms.

Authors:  Roberto Refinetti; Germaine Corné Lissen; Franz Halberg
Journal:  Biol Rhythm Res       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 1.219

3.  Evidence for a circaseptan and a circasemiseptan growth response to light/dark cycle shifts in nucleated and enucleated Acetabularia cells, respectively.

Authors:  H G Schweiger; S Berger; H Kretschmer; H Mörler; E Halberg; R B Sothern; F Halberg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1986-11       Impact factor: 11.205

  3 in total

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