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@thenightmancometh

‘Fight or flight’ – unless internal clocks are disrupted

Here’s how it’s supposed to work: Your brain sends signals to your body to release different hormones at certain times of the day. For example, you get a boost of the hormone cortisol — nature’s built-in alarm system — right before you usually wake up.

But hormone release actually relies on the interconnected activity of clocks in more than one part of the brain. New research from Washington University in St. Louis shows how daily release of glucocorticoids depends on coordinated clock-gene and neuronal activity rhythms in neurons found in two parts of the hypothalamus, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and paraventricular nucleus (PVN).

The new study, conducted with freely behaving mice, is published in Nature Communications.

“Normal behavior and physiology depends on a near 24-hour circadian release of various hormones,” said Jeff Jones, who led the study as a postdoctoral research scholar in biology in Arts & Sciences and recently started work as an assistant professor of biology at Texas A&M University. “When hormone release is disrupted, it can lead to numerous pathologies, including affective disorders like anxiety and depression and metabolic disorders like diabetes and obesity.

“We wanted to understand how signals from the central biological clock — a tiny brain area called the SCN — are decoded by the rest of the brain to generate these diverse circadian rhythms in hormone release,” said Jones, who worked with Erik Herzog, the Viktor Hamburger Distinguished Professor in Arts & Sciences at Washington University and senior author of the new study.

The daily timing of hormone release is controlled by the SCN. Located in the hypothalamus, just above where the optic nerves cross, neurons in the SCN send daily signals that are decoded in other parts of the brain that talk to the adrenal glands and the body’s endocrine system.

“Cortisol in humans (corticosterone in mice) is more typically known as a stress hormone involved in the ‘fight or flight’ response,” Jones said. “But the stress of waking up and preparing for the day is one of the biggest regular stressors to the body. Having a huge amount of this glucocorticoid released right as you wake up seems to help you gear up for the day.”

Or for the night, if you’re a mouse.

The same hormones that help humans prepare for dealing with the morning commute or a challenging work day also help mice meet their nightly step goals on the running wheel.

(Image caption: Projections from SCN neurons (magenta) send daily signals to rhythmic PVN neurons (cyan) to regulate circadian glucocorticoid release. Credit: Jeff Jones)

Using a novel neuronal recording approach, Jones and Herzog recorded brain activity in individual mice for up to two weeks at a time.

“Recording activity from identified types of neurons for such a long period of time is difficult and data intensive,” Herzog said. “Jeff pioneered these methods for long-term, real-time observations in behaving animals.”

Using information about each mouse’s daily rest-activity and corticosterone secretion, along with gene expression and electrical activity of targeted neurons in their brains, the scientists discovered a critical circuit between the SCN and neurons in the PVN that produce the hormone that triggers release of glucocorticoids.

Turns out, it’s not enough for the neurons in the SCN to send out daily signals; the ‘local’ clock in the PVN neurons also has to be working properly in order to produce coordinated daily rhythms in hormone release.

Experiments that eliminated a clock gene in the circadian-signal-receiving area of the brain broke the regular daily cycle.

“There’s certain groups of neurons in the SCN that communicate timing information to groups of neurons in the PVN that regulate daily hormone release,” Jones said. “And for a normal hormone rhythm to proceed, you need clocks in both the central pacemaker and this downstream region to work in tandem.”

The findings in mice could have implications for humans down the road, Jones said. Future therapies for cortisol-related diseases and genetic conditions in humans will need to take into account the importance of a second internal clock.

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Anonymous asked:

Going down on a girl after bottom surgery, call that Bluetooth because she doesn't have a dongle anymore

you sending this on anon makes you one of historys most incredible unknown poets

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Iron Man. That’s kind of catchy. It’s got a nice ring to it. I mean it’s not technically accurate. The suit’s a gold titanium alloy, but it’s kind of provocative, the imagery anyway.

IRON MAN (2008) dir. Jon Favreau

“Medievalists know that if they claim to have found “homosexuals” in the Middle Ages they will provoke cries of outrage, and nothing else they say will be heard. So they avoid the term. Thus Allen Frantzen, on the very first page of Before the Closet: Same-Sex Love from “Beowulf” to “Angels in America,” declares categorically: “I call this a book about ‘same-sex love’ because the obvious choice, ‘homosexuality,’ is, for periods before the modern era, inaccurate. ‘Homosexuality’ and ‘homosexuals’ were not recognized concepts in the Middle Ages.” Apparently, the same is not true of “heterosexuality” and “heterosexuals.” Frantzen does not hesitate, throughout his volume, to oppose “same-sex relations” to “heterosexual relations.” The result is a Middle Ages that would make Pat Buchanan jump for joy, one from which all the homosexuals have been banished and only heterosexuals remain. This should give one pause. If homosexuality was not a “recognized concept” in the Middle Ages, then heterosexuality wasn’t either. This in itself is not a reason to argue against its use: much of the best work in medieval studies relies on concepts that were not recognized in the Middle Ages. And, in any case, to insist that medieval scholarship limit itself to medieval concepts in their medieval meanings is to insist on an impossibility”

James A. Schultz 

Random ED things nobody really talks about

  • Being jealous of friends or people who have been severely underweight/ hospitalized
  • Hundreds of awkward angle body checking photos
  • Looking at the size of your legs/body in every mirror, reflection, shop window
  • Being disgusted at watching people eat
  • Comparing people’s body size and weight to yours before noticing anything else about them
  • Being obsessed with cooking/dieting/food programmes
  • The pain of hitting your hip bone on a table
  • Hating yourself for judging anyone who is healthy or overweight
  • Being proud of your lowest weight once recovered/weight restored
  • Eye rolls when anyone without an ED discusses their new diet/weight loss
  • Eating every tiny bit of a specific calorie portioned food because damn if you’ve counted those calories you are gonna enjoy them
  • Feeling embarrassed for eating ‘unhealthy’ foods because people assume you eat nothing/survive on lettuce
  • ‘Wow you’re actually eating’ kill me
  • Not enjoying excercise or wanting to work out
  • Alternating between being scared of all food and wanting to consume everything in sight
  • Really horrific awful bad breath (like seriously bad)
  • One day you’re too scared to eat a tomato the next you eat chocolate without worrying about it
  • Looking in the mirror after eating and feeling like you gained 20lbs
  • The anxiety and embarrassment of buying laxatives/diet pills