BMC Biology (Jun 2022)

Time of day as a critical variable in biology

  • Randy J. Nelson,
  • Jacob R. Bumgarner,
  • Jennifer A. Liu,
  • Jharnae A. Love,
  • O. Hecmarie Meléndez-Fernández,
  • Darius D. Becker-Krail,
  • William H. Walker,
  • James C. Walton,
  • A. Courtney DeVries,
  • Brian J. Prendergast

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-022-01333-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract 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 biological sciences in the calendar year 2015. We repeated this analysis for the year 2019, hypothesizing that the awarding of a Nobel Prize in 2017 for achievements in the field of circadian biology would highlight the importance of circadian rhythms for scientists across many disciplines, and improve time-of-day reporting. Results Our analyses of these 1000 empirical papers, however, revealed that most failed to include sufficient temporal details when describing experimental methods and that few systematic differences in time-of-day reporting existed between 2015 and 2019. Overall, only 6.1% of reports included time-of-day information about experimental measures and manipulations sufficient to permit replication. Conclusions Circadian rhythms are a defining feature of biological systems, and knowing when in the circadian day these systems are evaluated is fundamentally important information. Failing to account for time of day hampers reproducibility across laboratories, complicates interpretation of results, and reduces the value of data based predominantly on nocturnal animals when extrapolating to diurnal humans.

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