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Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity

Circadian clocks organize the precise timing of cellular and behavioral events. In Drosophila, circadian clocks consist of negative feedback loops in which the clock component PERIOD (PER) represses its own transcription. PER phosphorylation is a critical step in timing the onset and termination of...

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Autores principales: Smith, Elaine M, Lin, Jui-Ming, Meissner, Rose-Anne, Allada, Ravi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2211540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18208335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0040012
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author Smith, Elaine M
Lin, Jui-Ming
Meissner, Rose-Anne
Allada, Ravi
author_facet Smith, Elaine M
Lin, Jui-Ming
Meissner, Rose-Anne
Allada, Ravi
author_sort Smith, Elaine M
collection PubMed
description Circadian clocks organize the precise timing of cellular and behavioral events. In Drosophila, circadian clocks consist of negative feedback loops in which the clock component PERIOD (PER) represses its own transcription. PER phosphorylation is a critical step in timing the onset and termination of this feedback. The protein kinase CK2 has been linked to circadian timing, but the importance of this contribution is unclear; it is not certain where and when CK2 acts to regulate circadian rhythms. To determine its temporal and spatial functions, a dominant negative mutant of the catalytic alpha subunit, CK2α(Tik), was targeted to circadian neurons. Behaviorally, CK2α(Tik) induces severe period lengthening (∼33 h), greater than nearly all known circadian mutant alleles, and abolishes detectable free-running behavioral rhythmicity at high levels of expression. CK2α(Tik), when targeted to a subset of pacemaker neurons, generates period splitting, resulting in flies exhibiting both long and near 24-h periods. These behavioral effects are evident even when CK2α(Tik) expression is induced only during adulthood, implicating an acute role for CK2α function in circadian rhythms. CK2α(Tik) expression results in reduced PER phosphorylation, delayed nuclear entry, and dampened cycling with elevated trough levels of PER. Heightened trough levels of per transcript accompany increased protein levels, suggesting that CK2α(Tik) disturbs negative feedback of PER on its own transcription. Taken together, these in vivo data implicate a central role of CK2α function in timing PER negative feedback in adult circadian neurons.
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spelling pubmed-22115402008-01-25 Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity Smith, Elaine M Lin, Jui-Ming Meissner, Rose-Anne Allada, Ravi PLoS Genet Research Article Circadian clocks organize the precise timing of cellular and behavioral events. In Drosophila, circadian clocks consist of negative feedback loops in which the clock component PERIOD (PER) represses its own transcription. PER phosphorylation is a critical step in timing the onset and termination of this feedback. The protein kinase CK2 has been linked to circadian timing, but the importance of this contribution is unclear; it is not certain where and when CK2 acts to regulate circadian rhythms. To determine its temporal and spatial functions, a dominant negative mutant of the catalytic alpha subunit, CK2α(Tik), was targeted to circadian neurons. Behaviorally, CK2α(Tik) induces severe period lengthening (∼33 h), greater than nearly all known circadian mutant alleles, and abolishes detectable free-running behavioral rhythmicity at high levels of expression. CK2α(Tik), when targeted to a subset of pacemaker neurons, generates period splitting, resulting in flies exhibiting both long and near 24-h periods. These behavioral effects are evident even when CK2α(Tik) expression is induced only during adulthood, implicating an acute role for CK2α function in circadian rhythms. CK2α(Tik) expression results in reduced PER phosphorylation, delayed nuclear entry, and dampened cycling with elevated trough levels of PER. Heightened trough levels of per transcript accompany increased protein levels, suggesting that CK2α(Tik) disturbs negative feedback of PER on its own transcription. Taken together, these in vivo data implicate a central role of CK2α function in timing PER negative feedback in adult circadian neurons. Public Library of Science 2008-01 2008-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2211540/ /pubmed/18208335 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0040012 Text en © 2008 Smith et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, Elaine M
Lin, Jui-Ming
Meissner, Rose-Anne
Allada, Ravi
Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title_full Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title_fullStr Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title_full_unstemmed Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title_short Dominant-Negative CK2α Induces Potent Effects on Circadian Rhythmicity
title_sort dominant-negative ck2α induces potent effects on circadian rhythmicity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2211540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18208335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0040012
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