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Title: NURO 346: Biological Clocks


1
NURO 346 Biological Clocks
  • Lecture 2
  • Molecular Genetic Basis of Circadian Rhythms
    Milestones to a Molecular Clock Mechanism, Novel
    Circadian Photoreception, CircadianTranscriptional
    Control of the Genome

2
The Period Gene
  • The story of specific clock genes begins with
    the work of Konopka and Benzer (1971) describing
    the Period locus..
  • Their basic design was to mutagenize flies and
    then screen for inherited changes in eclosion
    timing.

3
The Period Gene
  • Locomotor activity rhythms were affected as well.

4
The Period Gene
5
The Period Gene
  • Summary of Early Findings
  • Per is the first single gene shown to control
    behavior.
  • PER protein is located in the nuclei of brain and
    visual neurons.
  • Per transcription, translation and nuclear
    localization is rhythmic.
  • Accumulation of PER suppresses its own
    transcription.
  • Later
  • The PER sequence contains a PAS protein-protein
    interaction domain.
  • Homologs of Per (Per1, Per2, Per3) exist in
    mammals.

6
The Clock Gene
  • Clock was identified in a screen of mutagenized
    mice done in the lab of J. Takahashi (Vitaterna
    et al.,1994).

7
The Clock Gene
  • Mice heterozygous for the mutation showed
    lengthened free-running period, while homozygotes
    showed either very long periods or complete loss
    of behavioral rhythmicity (Vitaterna et al.,1994).

8
The Clock Gene
  • Transgenic introduction of the wild-type Clock
    gene by bacterial artificial chromosome,
    rescues normal circadian function (Antoch et
    al., 1997).

9
The Clock Gene
  • Sequencing of Clock revealed that it has PAS
    domains, like Per.
  • bHLH basic Helix-Loop-Helix structural domain
    for binding of DNA.
  • Homology with ARNT and SIM transcription factors.
  • King et al., 1997

10
The Clock Gene
  • The Clock mutation is a single nucleotide change.
  • It leads to a shortened version of CLOCK missing
    exon 19.
  • King et al., 1997

11
The Clock Gene
  • Yeast two-hybrid screen reveals that Clock
    dimerizes with other proteins (Gekakis et al.,
    1998).

12
The Clock Gene
  • Of the potential binding partners only Bmal1
    co-expresses with Clock in the SCN and retina
    (Gekakis et al., 1998).

13
The Clock Gene
  • Clock/Bmal1 heterodimers drive transcription from
    the mPer1 promoter.
  • This is specific to E-box response element
    sequences
  • Mutant Clock (Clock ?19) fails to drive Per1
    (Gekakis et al., 1998).

14
The Clock Gene
  • PER protein can inhibit E-box mediated
    transcription by Clock (Drosophila, Darlington et
    al., 1998).

15
The Clock Gene
  • The first mammalian single gene shown to control
    a complex behavior.
  • Has PAS domains like Per.
  • Has a partner Bmal1.
  • A transcription factor that acts to increase Per
    transcription.
  • Binds to E-box sequences in the Per gene
    promoter.

16
The Tau Gene
  • Tau was described as a spontaneous mutation in an
    individual hamster that had an unusually phase
    advanced phase angle of entrainment and short
    freerunning period (Ralph and Menaker, 1998).

17
The Tau Gene
  • Tau was cloned and characterized by the Takahashi
    lab (Lowrey et al., 2000). that phosphorylates
    PER proteins.

18
The Tau Gene
  • Tau was shown to be casein kinase 1 epsilon
    (Lowrey et al., 2000).

19
The Tau Gene
  • Tau phosphorylates PER proteins (Lowrey et al.,
    2000).
  • Phophorylation of PER decreased degradation rates
    (Price et al., 1998, Drosophila).

20
Elements of a Clock Mechanism
  • Negative feedback? PER
  • Positive drive? Clock/Bmal1
  • Delay? Tau

21
Mouse Cryptochrome Genes
  • Cryptochromes (Cry) are blue light sensitive
    proteins related to DNA repair enzymes in plants.
  • In the course of non-circadian studies two groups
    (Sancar, Van der Horst, 1999) produced Cry1, Cry2
    and Cry1/Cry2 knockout mice.
  • There were profound effects on circadian rhythms.

22
Mouse Cryptochrome Genes
  • Crys interact with PER proteins and concentrate
    them in the nucleus.
  • PERs and CRYs are co-negative elements in the
    molecular oscillator mechanism (Kume et al 1999).

23
Testing Roles with Gene Knockouts
  • Bmal1 knockout induces arrhythmicity
  • (Bunger et al., 2000).

24
Testing Roles with Gene Knockouts
  • Like the Cry genes, Per1 and Per2
  • Show partial redundancy.
  • Per3 KO leads only to a change in
  • Period, not arrhythmicity.

Bae et al, 2002
25
Testing Roles with Gene Knockouts
  • KO of Rev-Erb does not lead to arrhythmicity.
  • Locomotor period is shortened and the responses
    to light are modified(?).

Preitner et al, 2002
26
Necessary Mammalian Clock Proteins
Positive Elements CLOCK, BMAL1
Negative Elements PER1, PER2, CRY1, CRY2
Mutations in Per3, RevErb, RORA, CKIe/d modify
period, but do not abolish clock.
27
Mammalian Autoregulatory Clock Gene Feedback Loops
  • Reppert and Weaver, 2002

28
  • Clock Genes in Other Nervous Systems

Zebrafish, Sassone-Corsi 2004
Drosophila, Hardin 2004
29
Human Clock Genes
  • The human genome contains homologs of all the
    mammalian circadian clock genes.

30
Clock Input
  • How are light zeitgeber signals transduced into
    physiological signals for the clock? Are there
    specialized photopigments for circadian
    phototransduction?
  • Once transduced how do light signals impinge on
    the molecular clock mechanism?

31
Circadian Photoreception
  • In mammals circadian phototransduction occurs in
    the eye and neural signals are conducted along
    the RHT to the SCN.
  • It was long assumed, but not proven, that the rod
    and cone photoreceptors which contain opsin
    photopigments were the locus of circadian
    phototransduction.

32
Melanopsin A Photopigment Specialized for
Circadian Photoreception
  • Melanopsin is expressed in a restricted set of
    retinal ganglion cells (red) that project to the
    biological clock (SCN) as well as the nuclei
    regulating the pupillary light reflex (OPN) and
    is a critical regulator of these non-visual
    photic responses.
  • Its stimulation produces depolarizing responses
    in GCs.
  • Its absorbance maximum is in the blue.
  • The transduction pathway is undefined.

33
Molecular Basis of Entrainment
  • Reppert and Weaver, 2002

34
Clock Output
  • Hands of the clock (overt rhythms in physiology
    and behavior) vs. gears of the clock (molecular
    components).
  • Do clock genes influence the expression of other
    genes?

35
Transcriptional Control
  • Genome sequencing and DNA microchip arrays
    ushered in the era of Circadian Genomics.

Hybridize to DNA chip With probes for many genes
Extract and Label Total RNA at Different CTs
Quantify Temporal Patterns of Gene Expression
36
Transcriptional Control
  • In mice two tissues were sampled SCN and liver.
  • 672/7000 genes were found to be rhythmic in both.
  • Genes were phase specific. (Panda et al 2002).

37
Transcriptional Control
  • Rhythmic genes were also tissue specific.
  • Out of more that 300 cycling genes in each tissue
    only 28 (including core clock genes) were
    rhythmic in both.

38
Transcriptional Control
  • The clock coordinates control of gene clusters
    that are functionally related to modulate tissue
    physiology.
  • Oxidative metabolism components in the SCN.

39
Transcriptional Control
  • Phase specificity is conferred by specific
    sequences in gene promoters.
  • E-boxes, Clk/Bmal1 for day-phase genes.

40
Transcriptional Control
  • Phase specificity is conferred by specific
    sequences in gene promoters.
  • RevErba response elements for night-phase genes
    (Ueda et al 2002).
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