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Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks

Cell-autonomous and self-sustained molecular oscillators drive circadian behavior and physiology in mammals. From rhythms recorded in cultured fibroblasts we identified the dominant cause for amplitude reduction as desynchronization of self-sustained oscillators. Here, we propose a general framework...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rougemont, Jacques, Naef, Felix
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1847945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17353935
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/msb4100130
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author Rougemont, Jacques
Naef, Felix
author_facet Rougemont, Jacques
Naef, Felix
author_sort Rougemont, Jacques
collection PubMed
description Cell-autonomous and self-sustained molecular oscillators drive circadian behavior and physiology in mammals. From rhythms recorded in cultured fibroblasts we identified the dominant cause for amplitude reduction as desynchronization of self-sustained oscillators. Here, we propose a general framework for quantifying luminescence signals from biochemical oscillators, both in populations and individual cells. Our model combines three essential aspects of circadian clocks: the stability of the limit cycle, fluctuations, and intercellular coupling. From population recordings we can simultaneously estimate the stiffness of individual frequencies, the period dispersion, and the interaction strength. Consistent with previous work, coupling is found to be weak and insufficient to synchronize cells. Moreover, we find that frequency fluctuations remain correlated for longer than one clock cycle, which is confirmed from individual cell recordings. Using genetic models for circadian clocks, we show that this reflects the stability properties of the underlying circadian limit-cycle oscillators, and we identify biochemical parameters that influence oscillator stability in mammals. Our study thus points to stabilizing mechanisms that dampen fluctuations to maintain accurate timing in peripheral circadian oscillators.
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spelling pubmed-18479452007-04-06 Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks Rougemont, Jacques Naef, Felix Mol Syst Biol Report Cell-autonomous and self-sustained molecular oscillators drive circadian behavior and physiology in mammals. From rhythms recorded in cultured fibroblasts we identified the dominant cause for amplitude reduction as desynchronization of self-sustained oscillators. Here, we propose a general framework for quantifying luminescence signals from biochemical oscillators, both in populations and individual cells. Our model combines three essential aspects of circadian clocks: the stability of the limit cycle, fluctuations, and intercellular coupling. From population recordings we can simultaneously estimate the stiffness of individual frequencies, the period dispersion, and the interaction strength. Consistent with previous work, coupling is found to be weak and insufficient to synchronize cells. Moreover, we find that frequency fluctuations remain correlated for longer than one clock cycle, which is confirmed from individual cell recordings. Using genetic models for circadian clocks, we show that this reflects the stability properties of the underlying circadian limit-cycle oscillators, and we identify biochemical parameters that influence oscillator stability in mammals. Our study thus points to stabilizing mechanisms that dampen fluctuations to maintain accurate timing in peripheral circadian oscillators. Nature Publishing Group 2007-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC1847945/ /pubmed/17353935 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/msb4100130 Text en Copyright © 2007, EMBO and Nature Publishing Group
spellingShingle Report
Rougemont, Jacques
Naef, Felix
Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title_full Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title_fullStr Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title_full_unstemmed Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title_short Dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
title_sort dynamical signatures of cellular fluctuations and oscillator stability in peripheral circadian clocks
topic Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1847945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17353935
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/msb4100130
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