Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://libjncir.jncasr.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10572/1442
Title: Circadian rhythms in fruit flies drosophila under natural conditions
Authors: Vasu, Sheeba
De, Joydeep
Keywords: Drosophila melanogaster
Circadian rhythms
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research
Citation: De, Joydeep. 2013, Circadian rhythms in fruit flies drosophila under natural conditions, MS thesis, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru
Abstract: Life forms on the earth have to experience and cope with several diurnal and annual geophysical cycles such as light and temperature. It is believed that organisms have evolved mechanisms in order to accomplish the task of synchronizing their behavioral, physiological and biochemical processes to the periodic environmental cycles (Vaze & Sharma, 2013), through the evolution of biological timekeeping systems or clocks. Many of the rhythmic phenomena in a diverse range of organisms have been shown to be regulated endogenously by their clocks (Pittendrigh, 1960), rather than just a mere response to the periodic variations in the environmental conditions. Biological oscillators with a periodicity of close to 24 hours (circa = almost, dian = day) are referred to as circadian clocks. In addition, these oscillators need to need to satisfy a few criteria in order to be called circadian clocks, such as, 1) they must be endogenously generated 2) they must be self-sustained – i.e., the oscillation must persist (free-run) even in the absence of any periodic time-cue (or, zeitgeber; zeit = time, geber = giver) 3) they can be synchronized by periodic light/dark cycle by a process known as ‘entrainment’ 4) they must be temperature-compensated - the period of the oscillator should remain unaltered within a physiologically tolerable range of temperatures (Pittendrigh, 1960).
Description: Open Access
URI: https://libjncir.jncasr.ac.in/xmlui/10572/1442
Appears in Collections:Student Theses (EIBU)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
8506.pdf21.63 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.