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Cellular rhythms glycolytic oscillations

Some of the main examples of biological rhythms of nonelectrical nature are discussed below, among which are glycolytic oscillations (Section III), oscillations and waves of cytosolic Ca + (Section IV), cAMP oscillations that underlie pulsatile intercellular communication in Dictyostelium amoebae (Section V), circadian rhythms (Section VI), and the cell cycle clock (Section VII). Section VIII is devoted to some recently discovered cellular rhythms. The transition from simple periodic behavior to complex oscillations including bursting and chaos is briefly dealt with in Section IX. Concluding remarks are presented in Section X. [Pg.259]

Glycolytic oscillations in yeast cells provided one of the first examples of oscillatory behavior in a biochemical system. They continue to serve as a prototype for cellular rhythms. This oscillatory phenomenon, discovered some 40 years ago [36, 37] and still vigorously investigated today [38], was important in several respects First, it illustrated the occurrence of periodic behavior in a key metabolic pathway. Second, because they were soon observed in cell extracts, glycolytic oscillations provided an instance of a biochemical clock amenable to in vitro studies. Initially observed in yeast cells and extracts, glycolytic oscillations were later observed in muscle cells and evidence exists for their occurrence in pancreatic p-cells in which they could underlie the pulsatile secretion of insulin [39]. [Pg.259]

Glycolytic oscillations and cAMP oscillations were, respectively, discovered around 1965 and 1975. Might there be a rough periodicity of some 10 years in progress on biochemical and cellular rhythms The field of biochemical oscillations has indeed changed drastically due to the discovery in 1985 of intracellular Ca oscillations that occur in a variety of cells, either spontaneously or as a result of stimulation by an external signal such as a hormone or a neurotransmitter. Since their... [Pg.10]


See other pages where Cellular rhythms glycolytic oscillations is mentioned: [Pg.283]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.521]    [Pg.608]    [Pg.627]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.259 , Pg.260 ]




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