Circadian phosphotimer generates time cues through PER dimerization-mediated trans-phosphorylation

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The circadian clock generates autonomous molecular rhythms that regulate sleep cycles, chronotypes, daily physiology, and expression patterns of almost the entire genome. Temporal phosphorylation of PERIOD (PER) proteins creates a phosphotimer that is critical for clock function. Although previous studies show that PER stably binds the casein kinase CK1, cis-acting phosphorylation of PER by CK1 is not compatible with slow PER phosphorylation extended over 24 hrs. So how can PER phosphorylation be programmed in a slow and controlled manner? Here, we show that the timing cues are encoded by PER-PER dimerization-mediated trans-phosphorylation, which enables the necessary time delay in phosphorylation and slow phosphorylation. When PER dimerization is disrupted, PER phosphorylation and circadian rhythms are severely compromised. In mouse models with point mutations in the PER dimerization domain, circadian period is shortened to ∼20 hrs, and the phase of wake/sleep cycles is dramatically advanced, switching a nocturnal animal to a half diurnal animal.

Article activity feed