Arendt was born in Newark-on-Trent.[1] Her father was a prisoner of war in Austria, and the family moved to Guernsey when he returned.[1] Arendt grew up in Jerbourg and Moulin Huet, where her father became a headmaster. She spent her summer holidays at the Collège de France, where she specialised in marine biology. She moved to University College London to study biochemistry for her undergraduate studies.[2] Her doctoral research considered the metabolism of 5-hydroxyindole.[3] After graduating, Arendt moved to Queen Charlotte's and Chelsea Hospital and eventually to Geneva, where she worked on Xenopus laevis.[1] After twelve years in Geneva she returned to the United Kingdom, where she became a researcher at the University of Surrey.[1]
Research and career
Arendt was eventually made Professor of Endocrinology at the University of Surrey, where she pioneered the field of chronobiology.[1][4] She developed immunotechnology to characterise and understand the role of melatonin and its metabolites in sleep and the circadian rhythm. She studied how they respond to light and their responses in conditions such as shift work, polar nights and jet lag. She was one of the first to scientifically describe jet lag,[3] and the first to develop therapeutic use of melatonin to alleviate its imapcts.[5]
Arendt created a situation where volunteers were kept in darkened rooms without clocks, light or social cues. Under typical circumstances bodies follow a circadian rhythm, which can be extended from 23 to 25 hours when deprived of context.[6] Her observations helped to explain why humans can accommodate an extra hour of sleep as opposed to losing it. Over the course of a 23-hour sleep cycle, hormones are secreted at the wrong times, causing a person to feel awake and hungry at inappropriate times. Disruptions to circadian rhythms in people who work night shifts or as flight attendants can cause carcinogenic effects.[7]