|   
				
				                         
                                                
                       
                  Exercises   
                  Mind   
                    over Time    
                   by Mark Yolen    
                          
                    
                  Suppose   
                      you could reset the inner clocks that run your life—programming   
                      yourself, for example, to wake up fresh and alert at 5:30   
                      AM if you had to make a crucial breakfast meeting, or shutting   
                      off the hunger that drives you to swallow a bag of    
                    chips every afternoon. If the prospect of controlling your   
                    body's timers seems a pleasing luxury, consider the case of   
                    Jason K., a New Jersey attorney. Jason suffers from a weakening   
                    malfunction of his biological clock called seasonal affective   
                    disorder, or SAD. It may seem a remote or even a fanciful   
                    ailment, especially during the summer, when its effects ebb,   
                    but it can throw the entire year, not to mention a whole life,   
                    into terrible turmoil.  
                   "It   
                    came up on me gradually, over time," Jason says.   
                    As the days got darker and darker going into fall and then   
                    winter, "My mood got darker. By winter I'd feel an overall   
                    sluggishness that made the work difficult; it took dramatically   
                    more effort to get anything done. Sleep wasn't restful; I   
                    found myself waking up 15 minutes every night just to see   
                    what time it was. And I developed an excessive craving for  
                  sweets."  
                  Jason's experience is not uncommon. In a recent  
                    New York City survey, more than one-third of responding adults  
                    reported at least mild winter ;  
                    6 out of 100 reported severe depression. Michael Terman, a  
                    clinical psychologist at New York State Psychiatric Institute  
                    in New York City, and a leading SAD researcher, notes that  
                    the degree of suffering goes well beyond typical holiday blues.  
                      
                   "When it hits," Terman says,  
                  "it's not just   
                    a matter of mood. It can be truly disabling for five months   
                    of the year, and it can cause an active social withdrawal—mothers who can't mother, a loss of interest in work, a   
                    total loss of libido." Although the pall usually lifts during   
                    the spring, he says, SAD can throw life permanently off course:  
                  "It's no small thing if you can't maintain a nine-to-five   
                    work schedule in winter." Some   
                    SAD sufferers, he says, simply gravitate toward a lifestyle   
                    that accommodates the disease.  "They tend to drift   
                    into work subcultures. They become freelancers, theater people,   
                    perennial graduate students—and many end up feeling their   
                    early goals in life are unachievable."  
                   Yet the    
                    is only one among a constellation of sleep disorders and related   
                    ills caused by the malfunctioning biological clocks. Indeed,   
                    inner clocks can sometimes cause trouble even when they're   
                    ticking away smoothly. The   
                    bleary-eyed miseries of jet lag are a familiar example of   
                    what can happen when you're hurled across time zones and your   
                    personal clock bumps out of sync with the pace of the rest   
                    of the world. These are only the obvious disorders.   
                    Susceptibility to pain, for example, tends to crest in the   
                    morning and ebb as the day wears on. Heart attacks are most   
                    likely to strike in midmorning. And biological rhythms can   
                    stretch across months as well as days and weeks: many animal   
                    species migrate and mate only according to strict seasonal   
                    timetables.    
                   Folklore and common sense have been telling   
                    us for centuries that we depend on inner clocks, but what   
                    and where they are and how they work had long remained a mystery.   
                    Now, thanks to a series of recent laboratory coups, the once-baffling   
                    components of our biological clocks have become clearer. For   
                    the first time, scientists have a diagram, remarkable in both   
                    elegance and simplicity, that shows where in our brains the   
                    timer is, how it uses the machinery in our cells as clockwork,   
                    and how ─ like the clacking and jangling Baby   
                    Bens that once regulated the pace of American days—it can be slowed down, speeded up, or reset. Most recently   
                    researchers have divined how the brain's clock can switch   
                    on and turn off pieces of biological machinery, suggesting   
                    that we may ultimately be able to regulate these processes   
                    at our pleasure, instead of submitting unreliably to their   
                    regulating us.    
                   In the brain, a recently discovered cluster   
                    of nerve cells called the , or SCN, appears to be at the heart of   
                    timekeeping. In mammals, the organ is remarkably reliable:   
                    even if it's removed from an experimental animal and placed   
                    in a dish, it can continue to keep time on its own for at   
                    least a day. The SCN is actually a pair of structures, like   
                    most parts of the brain. One half sits in the left hemisphere   
                    and one in the right, just behind and a bit below the eyes. "Each is made up of about 10 000 densely packed  
                  neurons,"   
                    explains Steven Reppert, the Harvard whose laboratory has been a key player in recent   
                    discoveries. "The SCNs are located just above where your optic   
                    nerves come together at the base of the brain." This is no   
                    accident: the SCN depends on light for what -clock   
                    experts call entertainment — synchronizing the inner clock   
                    with the cycles of light and darkness in the world outside.   
                    Some of the latest research, on mice, suggests that mammals   
                    have a set of special    
                    in their eyes, which pick up light signals and carry them   
                    directly to the SCN.These   
                    photoreceptors are different from the rods and cons used to   
                    perceive light hitting the .   
                       
                   A flood of light striking the right photoreceptors   
                    at the right time does just what the knobs on the back of   
                    that vintage Baby Ben do: reset the hands of the clock. A   
                    burst of light in the morning sets the clock ahead; a burst   
                    in the evening puts it backward. If, like Jason, you're a   
                    northerner, your inner clock may run slow in winter, falling   
                    behind without early-morning light that would normally nudge   
                    it forward. "When I talk with patients here in New York,"   
                    Terman explains, "I tell them that, biologically speaking,   
                    they're living in Chicago." When the bedside alarm goes off,   
                    New York wakes up, slipping into high gear. But their inner   
                    timers lag an hour or more behind, at Chicago or even California   
                    time, insisting that their brain and bodies should still be   
                    sound asleep.    
                   Not   
                    everyone has the problem. Most people aren't as vulnerable   
                    to a lack of morning light, which helps keep the inner clock   
                    in tune with the external environment. Every morning, the   
                    light of dawn makes its way to the SCN and advances the inner   
                    clock, allowing it to catch up with local time, rousing and   
                    easing us into daytime activity in blissful synchrony with   
                    local time. And because the nerve pathway from the eyes into   
                    the SCN bypasses those parts of the brain that register conscious   
                    sight, the inner clock can react to ambient light even when   
                    we're sound asleep. The light of dawn penetrates the eyelids,   
                    registers on the retina, and relays a silent signal into the   
                    SCN. If the internal clock has a tendency to run slow, morning   
                    light automatically shifts it ahead, putting it back in step   
                    with the world outside. It's beautifully simple—unless you   
                    live far enough above the equator so that in winter you're   
                    up, breakfasted, and at work before dawn. In fact, SAD seems   
                    to be more common in northern latitudes. When natural light   
                    is scarce, the best way to reset the inner clock is with a   
                    burst of artificial light.    
                       
                         
                  
                      
                     
                   The vital importance of the SCN as a biological   
                    time setter is a recent discovery, though not a new one. While   
                    its roots go back to the early 1900s it wasn't characterized   
                    until the early 1970s. What's really new is an understanding   
                    of the SCN's internal mechanism. Neuroscientists have begun   
                    to pry off the clock's cover to get a look at the workings.   
                    Research at a number of laboratories has revealed the workhorse   
                    of the biological clock to be an ingenious and ingeniously   
                    simple device in the individual cells that make up the SCN   
                    (and perhaps other time-sensitive organs as well). Such cells   
                    seem to run the whole system from the bottom up. "We're now   
                    pretty certain," Reppert says, "that the SCN is made up of   
                    numerous autonomous clocks in individual cells—and all the   
                    molecular machinery you need seems to reside in a single  
                  neuron."   
                    Underneath   
                    it all is one clock, the clock in the cell.    
                   The clocks are self-starting and remarkably   
                    reliable. Even when cut off from eternal light and temporary   
                    cues that reveal the time of the day, they slip out of alignment   
                    only gradually. Ambient light doesn't control the clocks;   
                    it simply helps adjust them.    
                   Although we're still uncertain how a malfunctioning   
                    biological clock affects behavior, or how it can lead to weakening   
                    cycles of gloom and anguish, Reppert's team has just published   
                    a paper suggesting an answer. They established a connection   
                    between the individual nerve cells whose microscopic inner   
                    machinery drives the SCN mechanism, and the manufacture of   
                    the hormones. The same proteins that built up and break down   
                    over a 24-hour cycle to run the circadian clock directly cause   
                    the release of a hormone that can regulate how animals act. "Basically, we had a framework for the molecule gears of the   
                    circadian clock in mammals," Reppert says, "What we wanted   
                    to get was a link to actual behavior."  
                   Reppert found that clock proteins switch on   
                    and off the gene that produces vasopressin. Outside the brain,   
                    vasopressin is important in controlling the salt and water   
                    balance in the body. In the brain, however, it's practically   
                    a different hormone, implicated in cycles of rest and activity   
                    in mammals. While vasopressin doesn't seem to influence the   
                    kinds of behavior involved in seasonal affective disorder,   
                    it does supply an exciting model for a-to-z operation of biological   
                    clocks and for how a malfunction can cause abnormalities in   
                    mood or behavior. Now scientists can see a continuum from   
                    the cycling of light and dark in the atmosphere around us,   
                    the world clock, inward to the SCN personal clock, then still   
                    further inward to the microscopic nerve-cell clocks, and finally,   
                    to the production of a hormone.    
                   That is only a beginning. Vasopressin is just   
                    one of a vast range of substances that regulate behavior.   
                    Cellular clocks haven't yet been directly linked to the cycling   
                    of familiar behavior- and mood-modulating substances like   
                    serotonin and melatonin. "It's going to take another decade   
                    to work out a connection between Reppert's work and ,"   
                    Terman predicts. But it isn't hard to foresee how visionary   
                    circadian-clock therapies might work. As a matter of fact,   
                    a couple is already in place. Jet lag, for example, might   
                    respond favorably to melatonin, at least for some people.   
                    And there's also an effective treatment for SAD. In 1980,   
                    Alfred Lewy, at the Oregon Health Sciences University's Sleep   
                    and Mood Disorders Laboratory, successfully relieved a man   
                    who suffered from recurrent winter depression simply by exposing   
                    him to bright light over several days, from six to nine every   
                    morning and four to seven every evening. In   
                    later treatments Lewy worked the dosage down to two hours   
                    of exposure a day at an intensity of 2 500 lux, which approximates   
                    the strength of natural light just after the sun has fully   
                    risen. Today, standard therapy for SAD patients   
                    involves exposure to artificial light for 30 minutes each   
                    morning at an intensity of 1 000 lux (which approximates the   
                    strength of natural light about 40 minutes after sunset.)   
                       
                   Terman's group has been working on refining   
                    the treatment: a computerized light system for the bedroom,   
                    imitating the gradual, naturally intensifying light of dawn.   
                    Jason tried it, and it worked beautifully. "Over a couple   
                    of hours it simulates the sun coming up," he says. "Somehow   
                    you're aware of it even when you're asleep: the light coming   
                    through your eyelids is a luxurious feeling." Within   
                    days, Jason's depression dissipated, his sleep habits returned   
                    to normal, and the sweet tooth cravings became somewhat less   
                    pronounced.   
                       
                   The possibilities raised by the discoveries   
                    on the workings of the biological clock go beyond moodiness   
                    and depression. If heart attacks happen at the prompting of   
                    a time signal, for example, is there a way to turn that signal   
                    off? Is there a way to control weight by spacing out the timing   
                    of hunger pangs? Is it possible to predict, even control,   
                    not just the day, but the hour, a baby is born? For the first   
                    time, science knows where and how to look for the answers   
                    to these questions.    
                   (2 057 words)   
                  (From Discover, July 1999 )   
                    Text   
                    
                    
                    
                     |