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Sleep & circadian

Suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)

DENucleus suprachiasmaticus (SCN)

The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is a paired hypothalamic structure situated immediately above the optic chiasm, containing approximately 20,000 neurons per side. It functions as the master circadian pacemaker of mammals, generating a near-24-hour rhythm via an autoregulatory transcriptional-translational feedback loop involving CLOCK, BMAL1, PER, and CRY proteins. Photic input from intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) expressing melanopsin entrains the SCN to the environmental light-dark cycle through the retinohypothalamic tract. The pacemaker role was definitively established by Ralph and colleagues (Science, 1990): grafting SCN tissue from a short-period mutant hamster into SCN-lesioned wild-type hosts restored circadian rhythms with the donor's period. SCN outputs synchronise peripheral clocks in liver, muscle, adipose, and other tissues via neural and humoral signals.

Sources

  1. Ralph MR, Foster RG, Davis FC, Menaker M. (1990). Transplanted suprachiasmatic nucleus determines circadian period. *Science*doi:10.1126/science.2305266
  2. Welsh DK, Takahashi JS, Kay SA. (2010). Suprachiasmatic nucleus: cell autonomy and network properties. *Annual Review of Physiology*doi:10.1146/annurev-physiol-021909-135919
  3. Hastings MH, Maywood ES, Brancaccio M. (2018). Generation of circadian rhythms in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. *Nature Reviews Neuroscience*doi:10.1038/s41583-018-0026-z