4.8 Article

Circadian and CLOCK-controlled regulation of the mouse transcriptome and cell proliferation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0611724104

Keywords

cell cycle; circadian rhythms; clock mutation; gene expression; protein-encoding transcriptome

Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAMS NIH HHS [AR050717, R21 AR050717, R01 AR055246] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIMH NIH HHS [U01 MH061915, U01 MH61915, P50 MH074924] Funding Source: Medline

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Circadian rhythms of cell and organismal physiology are controlled by an autoregulatory transcription-translation feedback loop that regulates the expression of rhythmic genes in a tissue-specific manner. Recent studies have suggested that components of the circadian pacemaker, such as the Clock and Per2 gene products, regulate a wide variety of processes, including obesity, sensitization to cocaine, cancer susceptibility, and morbidity to chemotherapeutic agents. To identify a more complete cohort of genes that are transcriptionally regulated by CLOCK and/or circadian rhythms, we used a DNA array interrogating the mouse protein-encoding transcriptome to measure gene expression in liver and skeletal muscle from WT and Clock mutant mice. In VI/T tissue, we found that a large percentage of expressed genes were transcription factors that were rhythmic in either muscle or liver, but not in both, suggesting that tissue-specific output of the pacemaker is regulated in part by a transcriptional cascade. In comparing tissues from WT and Clock mutant mice, we found that the Clock mutation affects the expression of many genes that are rhythmic in WT tissue, but also profoundly affects many nonrhythmic genes. In both liver and skeletal muscle, a significant number of CLOCKregulated genes were associated with the cell cycle and cell proliferation. To determine whether the observed patterns in cell-cycle gene expression in Clock mutants resulted in functional dysregulation, we compared proliferation rates of fibroblasts derived from WT or Clock mutant embryos and found that the Clock mutation significantly inhibits cell growth and proliferation.

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