Research field
Chronobiology
Chronobiology studies the molecular and physiological timing systems that align biological processes with the 24-hour light-dark cycle and longer seasonal rhythms. The central clock is a transcription-translation feedback loop of a handful of genes — CLOCK, BMAL1, PER, CRY — that drive oscillations across virtually every cell in the body, from immune function to metabolism. Disruption of these clocks, as in shift work or chronic jet lag, is increasingly linked to metabolic syndrome, cancer, and mood disorders. The pharmaceutical industry draws heavily on chronopharmacology to optimize drug timing, a practice called chronotherapy. Researchers in this field span cell biology, neuroscience, epidemiology, and biomedical engineering, united by the conviction that time-of-day is an underappreciated clinical variable.
Top institutions
Salk Institute for Biological Studies
University of Texas Southwestern
University of Surrey
Charité Berlin
LMU Munich
Subfields
Key technologies
Luciferase Reporter Assays
Actigraphy Wearables
Single-Cell RNA Sequencing
CRISPR Clock-Gene Editing
Polysomnography
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