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Circadian Rhythms: A CRY for Help

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Title: Circadian Rhythms: A CRY for Help


1
Circadian Rhythms A CRY for Help
  • By Rikard Fred

2
Content
  • Part I Introduction
  • What is The Circadian Clock
  • How Does The Circadian Clock Work
  • Why is it Important
  • Part II Experimental Plan
  • Approach
  • Finding the Target protein
  • Expression and Purification
  • Manipulation of CRY

3
What is The Circadian Clock?
  • Circadian originates from circa and dies which
    means about a day
  • It is the biological clock that keeps us on a 24
    hour day

4
The Circadian Clock
  • Helps organisms predict daily and seasonal
    changes in their environment
  • Give rise to changes in behavior and physiology
  • Is located to the suprachiasmatic nucleus in the
    brain
  • Is controlled by the environmental Light and Dark
    cycle

5
How Does the Circadian Clock Work?
  • It has three major components
  • A photoactive pigment i.e. Cryptochrome (CRY)
  • The translation/transcription clock that
    oscillates with a 24 hour periodicity
  • The genes controlled by the clock that generate
    the physiological response

6
  • The genes involved are per 1, 2, 3 and cry 1 and
    2
  • Which are controlled by the transcriptional
    activators CLOCK and BMAL
  • Results from cry knockouts indicates that the CRY
    protein is important for the maintenance of the
    circadian clock

7
The Clock Feedback Loop
8
Cryptochromes (CRYs)
  • Are blue light receptors
  • Are flavoproteins and have a Flavin (FAD) group
    as functional element
  • The Flavin group can transfer electrons
  • The FAD photogroup binds non-covalently to the
    CRY protein

The FAD Group
9
Why is this important?
  • We have today largely abandoned the natural day
    and night activity pattern
  • A lot of people suffers from difficult working
    hours
  • Being out of phase can affect both mental
    alertness as well as eating habits and therefore
    have a great impact on overall health

10
Approach
  • Light is the primary stimulus for the clock
  • The effect is cumulative but slow
  • Therefore a chemical manipulation of the
    photoreceptor might help resetting the clock
    faster then with light therapy
  • My approach is to silence the CRY for a short
    period of time to reset the clock

11
Finding the Target protein
  • Both cry1 and cry2 essential
  • But in the SCN only cry1 mRNA levels oscillates
  • cry1 is also the only one with an E-box
  • This makes CRY1 my primary target
  • But if possible the experiments should be carried
    out with both CRY1 and CRY2

12
Expression and Purification
  • Escherichia coli will be used as expression host
    (the SY2 cell line)
  • With the pGEX-4T-2 vector from Amersham biotech
  • The protein will be expressed as a glutathione
    S-transferase fusion protein and
  • Purified using a gluthatione-Sepharose column
  • If necessary the protein could be concentrated
    using available concentration columns

13
Manipulation of CRY
  • Two different approaches
  • Find a protein that binds to (and hopefully
    inhibits) CRY
  • Find/Construct a non-functional FAD molecule that
    will still bind to CRY

14
Finding an Interacting Protein
  • Perform co-precipitation using Western blot to
    find protein-protein interactions.
  • Use a cDNA library to randomly express possible
    target proteins
  • Transfer proteins to a nitro-cellulose membrane
    and incubate with labeled CRY
  • Sequence possible interacting proteins to
    identify them

15
Construct a FAD molecule
  • This will require some collaboration.
  • The FAD group is fairly simple
  • Synthesizing an analogue lacking a few electron
    bonds might be enough

The FAD Group
16
End of Presentation and Time for Questions
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