4.8 Article

Mutation of the Human Circadian Clock Gene CRY1 in Familial Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder

Journal

CELL
Volume 169, Issue 2, Pages 203-215

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.03.027

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [RO1 NS052495]
  2. Weill Cornell Medical College [12081164, NS052495]
  3. Calico Life Sciences LLC
  4. Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science [UL1 TR000043, UL1 TR001866]
  5. Turkish Academy of Sciences-TUBA
  6. Rockefeller University Women & Science Postdoctoral Fellowship program
  7. NARSAD Young Investigator Grant from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation [21131]

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Patterns of daily human activity are controlled by an intrinsic circadian clock that promotes similar to 24 hr rhythms in many behavioral and physiological processes. This system is altered in delayed sleep phase disorder (DSPD), a common form of insomnia in which sleep episodes are shifted to later times misaligned with the societal norm. Here, we report a hereditary form of DSPD associated with a dominant coding variation in the core circadian clock gene CRY1, which creates a transcriptional inhibitor with enhanced affinity for circadian activator proteins Clock and Bmal1. This gain-of-function CRY1 variant causes reduced expression of key transcriptional targets and lengthens the period of circadian molecular rhythms, providing a mechanistic link to DSPD symptoms. The allele has a frequency of up to 0.6%, and reverse phenotyping of unrelated families corroborates late and/or fragmented sleep patterns in carriers, suggesting that it affects sleep behavior in a sizeable portion of the human population.

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