Randy J Nelson

Randy J Nelson
West Virginia University | WVU · Neuroscience

PhD Psych; Endo UC Berkeley;

About

635
Publications
132,556
Reads
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36,172
Citations
Additional affiliations
August 1986 - July 2000
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Position
  • Professor
August 1984 - August 1986
University of Texas at Austin
Position
  • PostDoc Position
September 1978 - July 1984
University of California, Berkeley
Position
  • Research Assistant

Publications

Publications (635)
Article
Full-text available
Substance use disorder is a major global health concern, with a high prevalence among adolescents and young adults. The most common substances of abuse include alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, nicotine, and opiates. Evidence suggests that a mismatch between contemporary lifestyle and environmental demands leads to disrupted circadian rhythms that impai...
Article
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Disrupted or atypical light–dark cycles disrupts synchronization of endogenous circadian clocks to the external environment; extensive circadian rhythm desynchrony promotes adverse health outcomes. Previous studies suggest that disrupted circadian rhythms promote neuroinflammation and neuronal damage post-ischemia in otherwise healthy mice, however...
Article
Full-text available
Neuroscience and biological evidence emphasizes the profound influence of natural light on human health, offering benefits such as reducing fatigue, heightened alertness in healthcare providers, and improving patient outcomes. The objective of this review is to identify scientific studies and research to evaluate and report evidence of indoor light...
Article
Full-text available
Light enables vision and exerts widespread effects on physiology and behavior, including regulating circadian rhythms, sleep, hormone synthesis, affective state, and cognitive processes. Appropriate lighting in animal facilities may support welfare and ensure that animals enter experiments in an appropriate physiological and behavioral state. Furth...
Article
Full-text available
Despite its demonstrated biological significance, time of day is a broadly overlooked biological variable in preclinical and clinical studies. How time of day affects the influence of peripheral tumors on central (brain) function remains unspecified. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that peripheral mammary cancer tumors alter the transcriptome of imm...
Article
Full-text available
Aging is a risk factor for the development of breast cancer. Foundational science studies have supported associations among neuroinflammation, breast cancer, and chemotherapy, but to date, these associations are based on studies using young adult rodents. The current study examined the neuroinflammatory effects of chemotherapy in aged, tumor-naïve...
Article
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Life on Earth has adapted to the changing patterns of light and darkness caused by the Earth's rotation. Known as circadian rhythms, these 24 h biological rhythms are regulated through light exposure and coordinate a range of behaviors such as sleep-wake cycles, eating, activity levels, and more. However, artificial light at night can disrupt these...
Chapter
Life on earth has evolved under a consistent cycle of light and darkness caused by the earth's rotation around its axis. This has led to a 24-hour circadian system in most organisms, ranging all the way from fungi to humans. With the advent of electric light in the 19th century, cycles of light and darkness have drastically changed. Shift workers a...
Article
Full-text available
For over a hundred years, the lighting industry has primarily been driven by illumination aesthetics, energy efficiency and product cost with little consideration of the effects of light on health. The recent widespread replacement of traditional light sources by blue-enriched LED lights has heightened concerns about the disruption of the blue-sens...
Preprint
Full-text available
Light enables vision and exerts widespread effects on physiology and behaviour, including regulating circadian rhythms, sleep, hormone synthesis, affective state, and cognitive processes. Appropriate lighting in animal facilities may support welfare and ensure that animals enter experiments in a controlled physiological and behavioural state. Prope...
Article
Full-text available
Circadian rhythms are ubiquitous endogenous rhythms with a period of approximately twenty-four hours [...]
Article
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Circadian rhythms are internal manifestations of the 24-h solar day that allow for synchronization of biological and behavioral processes to the external solar day. This precise regulation of physiology and behavior improves adaptive function and survival. Chronotherapy takes advantage of circadian rhythms in physiological processes to optimize the...
Article
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The structure and function of the cardiovascular system are modulated across the day by circadian rhythms, making this system susceptible to circadian rhythm disruption. Recent evidence demonstrated that short-term exposure to a pervasive circadian rhythm disruptor, artificial light at night (ALAN), increased inflammation and altered angiogenic tra...
Article
Physiology and behavior are synchronized to the external environment by endogenous circadian rhythms that are set to precisely 24 hours by exposure to bright light early in the circadian day. Exposure to artificial light outside of the typical solar day, such as during the night, may impair aspects of physiology and behavior in human and non-human...
Chapter
Circadian rhythms are internal manifestations of the 24-h solar day that allow synchronization of biological and behavioral processes to the external temporal environment. In mammals, circadian rhythms are generated and sustained by the hypothalamic master clock, or suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Within the SCN, a highly coupled network of rhythmic...
Chapter
Throughout evolution, the temporal solar cycles of our rotating planet were internalized via circadian rhythms. These ~24-h internal rhythms drive daily patterns of physiology and behavior. Circadian rhythms are entrained, primarily by the light–dark cycle, and precisely controlled by a so-called master clock located within the suprachiasmatic nucl...
Article
Full-text available
Pain behavior and the systems that mediate opioid analgesia and opioid reward processing display circadian rhythms. Moreover, the pain system and opioid processing systems, including the mesolimbic reward circuitry, reciprocally interact with the circadian system. Recent work has demonstrated the disruptive relationship among these three systems. D...
Article
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Availability of artificial light and light-emitting devices have altered human temporal life, allowing 24-hour healthcare, commerce and production, and expanding social life around the clock. However, physiology and behavior that evolved in the context of 24 h solar days are frequently perturbed by exposure to artificial light at night. This is par...
Preprint
Full-text available
For over a hundred years, the lighting industry has primarily been driven by illumination aesthetics, energy efficiency and product cost with little consideration of the effects of light on health. The recent widespread replacement of traditional light sources by blue-enriched LED lights has heightened concerns about the disruption of the blue-sens...
Chapter
Arnold Adolph Berthold was a German physician-scientist and textbook author who is most recognized as the author of the first published experiment in endocrinology. This study reports several morphological and behavioral outcomes of an endocrine manipulation that involved castration and reimplantation of rooster testes. His insightful experiment co...
Chapter
David Crews’ 50-year career was remarkable for the diversity of disciplines in which he made seminal discoveries: evolutionary biology, reproductive physiology, sex determination, brain sexual differentiation, behavioral neuroendocrinology, and transgenerational epigenetics. He never limited himself to a single or few species; instead, he would ide...
Chapter
Frank Ambrose Beach is generally considered to be one of the founders of behavioral neuroendocrinology with the publication of his influential book, Hormones and Behavior, in 1948; he continued to provide intellectual leadership in shaping the field for the next 40 years. He received his PhD from University of Chicago, working with Karl Lashley and...
Chapter
Julian M. Davidson (15 April 1931–31 December 2001) grew up in Scotland, attended university in Israel, and completed graduate and postdoctoral studies in the United States. He spent his scientific career in the United States. He trained in neuroendocrinology with PhD mentor, William Ganong, and postdoctoral mentor, Charles Sawyer, and became inter...
Chapter
Seasonality has profoundly shaped the evolution of virtually all long-lived organisms on earth. Over most of the planet environmental conditions are not constant, but instead vary in dramatic albeit predictable ways. Food availability, ambient temperatures, rainfall, and a variety of other conditions vary with the changing seasons. As such, behavio...
Article
Circadian rhythms are endogenous biological cycles that regulate physiology and behavior for optimal adaptive function and survival; they are synchronized to precisely 24 hours by daily light exposure. Disruption of the daily light-dark (LD) cycle by exposure to artificial light at night (ALAN) dysregulates core clock genes and biological function....
Article
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The automation of behavioral tracking and analysis in preclinical research can serve to advance the rate of research outcomes, increase experimental scalability, and challenge the scientific reproducibility crisis. Recent advances in the efficiency, accuracy, and accessibility of deep learning (DL) and machine learning (ML) frameworks are enabling...
Article
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Background Circadian rhythms are important for all aspects of biology; virtually every aspect of biological function varies according to time of day. Although this is well known, variation across the day is also often ignored in the design and reporting of research. For this review, we analyzed the top 50 cited papers across 10 major domains of the...
Article
Changes to photoperiod (day length) occur in anticipation of seasonal environmental changes, altering physiology and behavior to maximize fitness. In order for photoperiod to be useful as a predictive factor of temperature or food availability, day and night must be distinct. The increasing prevalence of exposure to artificial light at night (ALAN)...
Article
Full-text available
Circadian rhythms convergently evolved to allow for optimal synchronization of individuals’ physiological and behavioral processes with the Earth’s 24-h periodic cycling of environmental light and temperature. Whereas the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is considered the primary pacemaker of the mammalian circadian system, many extra-SCN oscillatory...
Article
Full-text available
Vascular networks are fundamental components of biological systems. Quantitative analysis and observation of the features of these networks can improve our understanding of their roles in health and disease. Recent advancements in imaging technologies have enabled the generation of large-scale vasculature datasets, but barriers to analyzing these d...
Article
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Light at night is a pervasive problem in our society; over 80% of the world’s population experiences significant light pollution. Exacerbating this issue is the reality that artificially lit outdoor areas are growing by 2.2% per year and continuously lit areas brighten by 2.2% each year due to the rapid growths in population and urbanization. Furth...
Article
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Sex as a biological variable is the focus of much literature and has been emphasized by the National Institutes of Health, in part, to remedy a long history of male-dominated studies in preclinical and clinical research. We propose that time-of-day is also a crucial biological variable in biomedical research. In common with sex differences, time-of...
Book
53 articles The Oxford Encyclopedia of Neuroendocrine and Autonomic Systems provides an up-to-date survey of the wide range of scholarship being conducted on these two systems in the field of neuroendocrinology. The Encyclopedia includes more than 50 articles—each approximately 8,000 words in length—that provide thorough overviews of a diverse set...
Article
Full-text available
Diabetes poses a high risk for debilitating complications in neural tissues, regulating glucose uptake through insulin-dependent and predominantly insulin-independent pathways. Supramolecular nanostructures provide a flexible strategy for combinatorial regulation of glycemia. Here, we compare the effects of free insulin to insulin bound to positive...
Article
Disruption of circadian rhythms has detrimental host consequences. Indeed, both clinical and foundational science demonstrate a clear relationship between disruption of circadian rhythms and cancer initiation and progression. Because timing of food intake can act as a zeitgeber (i.e., entrainment signal) for the circadian clock, and most individual...
Article
Full-text available
Chemotherapy is more effective in the treatment of peripheral tumors than brain metastases, likely reflecting the reduced ability of chemotherapy to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-tumor barrier at efficacious concentrations. Recent studies demonstrate circadian regulation of the BBB. Thus, we predicted that optimally timed chemothera...
Article
Full-text available
Artificial light at night (ALAN) is a pervasive phenomenon. Although initially assumed to be innocuous, recent research has demonstrated its deleterious effects on physiology and behavior. Exposure to ALAN is associated with disruptions to sleep/wake cycles, development of mood disorders, metabolic disorders, and cancer. However, the influence of A...
Article
Full-text available
The goal of this review is to provide a perspective on the nature and importance of the relationship between the circadian and pain systems. We provide: 1) An overview of the circadian and pain systems, 2) a review of direct and correlative evidence that demonstrates diurnal and circadian rhythms within the pain system; 3) a perspective highlightin...
Article
Full-text available
Cardiovascular diseases are the top cause of mortality in the United States, and ischemic heart disease accounts for 16% of all deaths around the world. Modifiable risk factors such as diet and exercise have often been primary targets in addressing these conditions. However, mounting evidence suggests that environmental factors that disrupt physiol...
Article
Full-text available
Several endogenous and exogenous factors interact to influence stroke occurrence, in turn contributing to discernable daily distribution patterns in the frequency and severity of cerebrovascular events. Specifically, strokes that occur during the morning tend to be more severe and are associated with elevated diastolic blood pressure, increased hos...
Preprint
Full-text available
Vascular networks can dictate and indicate states of health and disease. Structural analyses of these networks can facilitate improved understanding of disease states. Recent advances in preclinical imaging techniques and segmentation software have led to the generation of large-scale vasculature datasets. However, these advances have not been acco...
Article
Time-of-day is a crucial, yet often overlooked, biological variable in biomedical research. We examined the top 25 most cited papers in several domains of behavioral phenotyping to determine whether time-of-day information was reported. The majority of studies report behavioral testing conducted during the day, which does not coincide with the opti...
Article
Full-text available
Life on earth has evolved during the past several billion years under relatively bright days and dark nights. Virtually, all organisms on the planet display an internal representation of the solar days in the form of circadian rhythms driven by biological clocks. Nearly every aspect of physiology and behavior is mediated by these internal clocks. T...
Chapter
During the evolution of life, the temporal rhythm of our rotating planet was internalized in the form of circadian rhythms. Circadian rhythms are ~24h internal manifestations that drive daily patterns of physiology and behavior. These rhythms are entrained (synchronized) to the external environment, primarily by the light-dark cycle, and precisely...
Article
Full-text available
For many individuals in industrialized nations, the widespread adoption of electric lighting has dramatically affected the circadian organization of physiology and behavior. Although initially assumed to be innocuous, exposure to artificial light at night (ALAN) is associated with several disorders, including increased incidence of cancer, metaboli...
Article
Full-text available
Although much has been learned about circadian clocks and rhythms over the past few decades, translation of this foundational science underlying the temporal regulation of physiology and behavior to clinical applications has been slow. Indeed, acceptance of the modern study of circadian rhythms has been blunted because the phenomenology of cyclic c...
Article
Circadian rhythms are endogenous biological cycles that synchronize physiology and behavior to promote optimal function. These ~24‐hour internal rhythms are set to precisely 24 hours daily by exposure to the sun. However, the prevalence of night‐time lighting has the potential to dysregulate these biological functions. Hospital patients may be part...
Article
Full-text available
The advent and wide-spread adoption of electric lighting over the past century has profoundly affected the circadian organization of physiology and behavior for many individuals in industrialized nations; electric lighting in homes, work environments, and public areas have extended daytime activities into the evening, thus, increasing night-time ex...
Article
Full-text available
Functional circadian timekeeping is necessary for homeostatic control of the immune system and appropriate immune responsiveness. Disruption of natural light-dark cycles, through light at night (LAN), impairs innate and adaptive immune responses in nocturnal rodents. These altered immune responses are associated with disrupted endogenous gene trans...
Article
Full-text available
The growing presence of artificial lighting across the globe presents a number of challenges to human and ecological health despite its societal benefits. Exposure to artificial light at night, a seemingly innocuous aspect of modern life, disrupts behavior and physiological functions. Specifically, light at night induces neuroinflammation, which is...
Article
Full-text available
Circadian rhythms are internal manifestations of the solar day that permit adaptations to predictable environmental temporal changes. These ~24-h rhythms are controlled by molecular clockworks within the brain that are reset daily to precisely 24 h by exposure to the light-dark cycle. Information from the master clock in the mammalian hypothalamus...
Article
Background: Cytokines are key signaling molecules within the immune system that regulate a host's response to pathogens and neuronal damage. Aberrant cytokine signaling has been implicated in many neurological diseases. Therefore, accurately measuring cytokine concentrations within the brain is crucial. New method: This study demonstrates that r...
Article
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The Earth's surface temperature is rising, and precipitation patterns throughout the Earth are changing; the source of these shifts is likely anthropogenic in nature. Alterations in temperature and precipitation have obvious direct and indirect ef‐fects on both plants and animals. Notably, changes in temperature and precipita‐tion alone can have bo...
Article
Aims: Electric lighting is beneficial to modern society; however, it is becoming apparent that light at night (LAN) is not without biological consequences. Several studies have reported negative effects of LAN on health and behavior in humans and nonhuman animals. Exposure of non-diabetic mice to dim LAN impairs glucose tolerance, whereas a return...
Article
Artificial light at night (LAN) is a pervasive phenomenon in today’s society, and the detrimental consequences of LAN exposure are becoming apparent. LAN is associated with the increased incidence of metabolic disorders, cancers, mood alterations, and immune dysfunction in mammals. Consequently, we examined the effects of dim LAN (DLAN) on wound he...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Artificial light at night (ALAN) has become a ubiquitous part of our society. Animal studies have shown that ALAN exposure promotes a depressive-like mood and increases peripheral inflammation likely due to circadian disruption. We hypothesized that sleeping with ALAN will increase systemic inflammation in humans. Methods We enrolled...
Article
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Key points The embryonic PHOX2B‐progenitor domain generates neuronal and glial cells which together are involved in chemosensory control of breathing and sleep homeostasis. Ablating PHOX2B‐derived astrocytes significantly contributes to secondary hypoxic respiratory depression as well as abnormalities in sleep homeostasis. PHOX2B‐derived astrocyte...
Article
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In many species, seasonal changes in photoperiod regulate several behaviors and physiological systems, including reproduction, energy balance, and immune function. MicroRNAs (miRs) regulate numerous physiological processes and developmental transitions through translational repression and mRNA degradation. Their role in seasonal transitions has bee...
Article
Among cancer patients, metabolic and sleep abnormalities are significant problems that are associated with decreased quality of life and increased mortality. In spite of the abundance of metabolic and sleep abnormalities in cancer patients, the mechanisms by which tumors alter metabolism and sleep remain unknown. Utilizing a non-metastatic murine b...
Article
Nighttime lighting is one of the great conveniences of modernization; however, there is mounting evidence that inopportune light exposure can disrupt physiological and behavioral functions. Hospital patients may be particularly vulnerable to the consequences of light at night due to their compromised physiological state. Cardiac arrest/cardiopulmon...
Article
Fine ambient particulate matter (PM2.5) is able to induce sympathetic activation and inflammation in the brain. However, direct evidence demonstrating an essential role of sympathetic activation in PM2.5-associated disease progression is lacking. We assess the contribution of α2B-adrenergic receptor (Adra2b) in air pollution-associated hypertension...
Article
Full-text available
Immune signaling is known to regulate sleep. miR-155 is a microRNA that regulates immune responses. We hypothesized that miR-155 would alter sleep regulation. Thus, we investigated the potential effects of miR-155 deletion on sleep-wake behavior in adult female homozygous miR-155 knockout (miR-155KO) mice and littermate controls (WT). Mice were imp...
Article
Despite the omnipresence of artificial and natural light exposure, there exists little guidance in the United States and elsewhere on light exposure in terms of timing, intensity, spectrum, and other light characteristics known to affect human health, performance, and well-being; in parallel, there is little information regarding the quantity and c...
Article
The objective of this study is to evaluate the cellular and molecular changes associated with the cognitive function as a late- effect of clinically relevant fractionated whole brain irradiation (fWBI) treatment using immunocompetent mouse model. Microglia are not only the immune mediators of the brain but also involved in synaptic pruning and neur...
Article
Full-text available
Light has substantial influences on the physiology and behavior of most laboratory animals. As such, lighting conditions within animal rooms are potentially significant and often underappreciated variables within experiments. Disruption of the light/dark cycle, primarily by exposing animals to light at night (LAN), disturbs biological rhythms and h...
Article
We investigated relationships among immune, metabolic, and sleep abnormalities in mice with non-metastatic mammary cancer. Tumor-bearing mice displayed interleukin-6 (IL-6)-mediated peripheral inflammation, coincident with altered hepatic glucose processing and sleep. Tumor-bearing mice were hyperphagic, had reduced serum leptin concentrations, and...
Article
Full-text available
Life has evolved to internalize and depend upon the daily and seasonal light cycles to synchronize physiology and behavior with environmental conditions. The nightscape has been vastly changed in response to the use of artificial lighting. Wildlife is now often exposed to direct lighting via streetlights or indirect lighting via sky glow at night....
Article
Full-text available
Life on earth has evolved during the past several billion years under relatively bright days and dark night conditions. The wide-spread adoption of electric lights during the past century exposed animals, both human and non-human, to significant light at night for the first time in their evolutionary history. Endogenous circadian clocks depend on l...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Electric lighting at night has many benefits for modern society; however, several studies have reported deleterious effects on health. Exposure of nondiabetic mice to dim levels of light at night (LAN) impairs glucose tolerance, whereas a return to dark nights (LD) reverses this impairment. TALLYHO/JngJ (TH) mice are a polygenic mouse...