Merrow Lab

Molecular Chronobiology

Welcome!

The circadian clock represents a fundamental aspect of biology that is possibly common to all cells. The clock imposes a temporal structure on processes from gene expression to behavior. Although circadian clocks are recognised in the lab by a self-sustained, approximately 24h oscillation in constant conditions, these clocks are virtually always found in the entrained state in nature. Entrainment is the process whereby the circadian machinery is stably synchronized to the 24h environmental cycle. Zeitgebers, the stimuli that reliably recur each 24h, include light and numerous other predictable features of the environment stemming from the light cycle (e.g. temperature, food, etc.). Due to biological, genetic and environmental variability (e.g. season), a distribution of entrained phases or chronotypes is observed in a given population. Thus, entrainment is not a single entity but rather a dynamic process and until we have figured out the rules therein we cannot understand daily timing.
We like entrainment as an experimental tool and we use it a lot! Our main project at this point involves circadian clocks in non-photosynthetic bacteria.

Group Members

Prof. Dr. med. habil. Martha Merrow, Ph.D., i.R.
Sonia Viteri
Borja Ferrero Bordera

Post Doctoral Fellow

PhD Eva Bastida
Astrid Bauer

Technical Assistant

Dr. Emine Erdag

Funding