BIO254:Pacemaker
Due Date: 11/20
Description
A pacemaker is a biological oscillator (biological clock, biological timer). Pacemakers control the timing of many biological processes or functions including sleep, the menstrual cycle, and hybernation.
Background and History
The field of biology that studies pacemakers is chronobiology.
Temporal Range

Mechanisms
Pacemakers use various mechanisms to keep track of time, and control many different biological functions. Here we will focus on pacemakers involved in the nervous system.
and functions of neurobiological pacemakers=
Oscillatory processes that underlie sensory coding, attention, memory and sleep (Fontanini, 2006).
Biological pacemakers drive many time-dependent processes in organisms, including heart rate, cell division in embryogenesis, and circadian activities.
Artificial pacemakers
Artificial pacemakers are used to rescue patients with deficient pacemakers, for example when the sinus node of the heart does not function correctly. Genetically engineered pacemakers may begin to replace microelectronic pacemakers (Boink, 2006).
Biological pacemakers can be in a single cell, but typically involve many cells. The periods of biological pacemakers span a large range.
Other types of pacemakers
Artificial pacemakers implanted in the human brain
Tiny electrodes implanted in the brain of epilepsy patients at the precise (with 1 mm accuracy) locations that are the origins of seizures in a given patient create signals that help prevent seizures (http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-info/docs/1900/1937.asp?index=8782).
References
Boink GJ, Seppen J, de Bakker JM, Tan HL (2006) .Gene therapy to create biological pacemakers.Med Biol Eng Comput. Oct 18; [Epub ahead of print]
Fontanini A, Bower JM.Slow-waves in the olfactory system: an olfactory perspective on cortical rhythms.Trends Neurosci. 2006 Aug;29(8):429-37. Epub 2006 Jul 13.
Moortgat KT, Clifford H. Keller§, Theodore H. Bullock, and Terrence J. Sejnowski (1998) Submicrosecond pacemaker precision is behaviorally modulated: The gymnotiform electromotor pathway. PNAS Vol. 95, Issue 8, 4684-4689.
