4.8 Article

Blood-Borne Circadian Signal Stimulates Daily Oscillations in Actin Dynamics and SRF Activity

期刊

CELL
卷 152, 期 3, 页码 492-503

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.12.027

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资金

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [SNF 31-113565, SNF 31-128656/1, SNF 310000-122094, SNF 320030-124886]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation (NCCR program grant Frontiers in Genetics)
  3. European Research Council [ERC-AdG 250117, ERC-Ad-G 268690]
  4. State of Geneva
  5. Louis Jeantet Foundation of Medicine
  6. EMBO
  7. Cancer Research UK
  8. Cancer Research UK [15687] Funding Source: researchfish

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In peripheral tissues circadian gene expression can be driven either by local oscillators or by cyclic systemic cues controlled by the master clock in the brain's suprachiasmatic nucleus. In the latter case, systemic signals can activate immediate early transcription factors (IETFs) and thereby control rhythmic transcription. In order to identify IETFs induced by diurnal blood-borne signals, we developed an unbiased experimental strategy, dubbed Synthetic TAndem Repeat PROMoter (STAR-PROM) screening. This technique relies on the observation that most transcription factor binding sites exist at a relatively high frequency in random DNA sequences. Using STAR-PROM we identified serum response factor (SRF) as an IETF responding to oscillating signaling proteins present in human and rodent sera. Our data suggest that in mouse liver SRF is regulated via dramatic diurnal changes of actin dynamics, leading to the rhythmic translocation of the SRF coactivator Myocardin-related transcription factor-B (MRTF-B) into the nucleus.

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