4.7 Article

Dual modes of CLOCK:BMAL1 inhibition mediated by Cryptochrome and Period proteins in the mammalian circadian clock

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 28, Issue 18, Pages 1989-1998

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.249417.114

Keywords

circadian; Cryptochrome; Period; transcription; DNA binding

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM31082]
  2. Science Research Council
  3. Academia Sinica, Taiwan, China

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The mammalian circadian clock is based on a transcription translation feedback loop (TTFL) in which CLOCK and BMAL1 proteins act as transcriptional activators of Cryptochrome and Period genes, which encode proteins that repress CLOCK-BMAL1 with a periodicity of 24 h. In this model, the mechanistic roles of CRY and PER are unclear. Here, we used a controlled targeting system to introduce CRY1 or PER2 into the nuclei of mouse cells with defined circadian genotypes to characterize the functions of CRY and PER. Our data show that CRY is the primary repressor in the TTFL: It binds to CLOCK-BMAL1 at the promoter and inhibits CLOCK-BMAL1-dependent transcription without dissociating the complex (blocking-type repression). PER alone has no effect on CLOCK-BMAL1-activated transcription. However, in the presence of CRY, nuclear entry of PER inhibits transcription by displacing CLOCK-BMAL1 from the promoter (displacement-type repression). In light of these findings, we propose a new model for the mammalian circadian clock in which the negative arm of the TTFL proceeds by two different mechanisms during the circadian cycle.

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