Literature DB >> 16448219

Clock genes of Mammalian cells: practical implications in tissue culture.

Bertrand Kaeffer1, Lissia Pardini.   

Abstract

The clock genes family is expressed by all the somatic cells driving central and peripheral circadian rhythms through transcription/translation feedback loops. The circadian clock provides a local time for a cell and a way to integrate the normal environmental changes to smoothly adapt the cellular machinery to new conditions. The central circadian rhythm is retained in primary cultures by neurons of the suprachiasmatic nuclei. The peripheral circadian rhythms of the other somatic cells are progressively dampened down up to loss unless neuronal signals of the central clock are provided for re-entrainment. Under typical culture conditions (obscurity, 37 +/- 1 degrees C, 5-7% CO(2)), freshly explanted peripheral cells harbor chaotic expression of clock genes for 12-14 h and loose, coordinated oscillating patterns of clock components. Cells of normal or cancerous phenotypes established in culture harbor low levels of clock genes idling up to the re-occurrence of new synchronizer signals. Synchronizers are physicochemical cues (like thermic oscillations, short-term exposure to high concentrations of serum or single medium exchange) able to re-induce molecular oscillations of clock genes. The environmental synchronizers are integrated by response elements located in the promoter region of period genes that drive the central oscillator complex (CLOCK:BMAL1 and NPAS2:BMAL1 heterodimers). Only a few cell lines from different species and lineages have been tested for the existence or the functioning of a circadian clockwork. The best characterized cell lines are the immortalized SCN2.2 neurons of rat suprachiasmatic nuclei for the central clock and the Rat-1 fibroblasts or the NIH/3T3 cells for peripheral clocks. Isolation methods of fragile cell phenotypes may benefit from research on the biological clocks to design improved tissue culture media and new bioassays to diagnose pernicious consequences for health of circadian rhythm alterations.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16448219     DOI: 10.1007/s11626-005-0001-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim        ISSN: 1071-2690            Impact factor:   2.416


  131 in total

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2.  Circadian programs of transcriptional activation, signaling, and protein turnover revealed by microarray analysis of mammalian cells.

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3.  Dimerization and nuclear entry of mPER proteins in mammalian cells.

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Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2000-06-01       Impact factor: 11.361

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5.  Differential functions of mPer1, mPer2, and mPer3 in the SCN circadian clock.

Authors:  K Bae; X Jin; E S Maywood; M H Hastings; S M Reppert; D R Weaver
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 17.173

6.  Calcium and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide induced expression of circadian clock gene mPer1 in the mouse cerebellar granule cell culture.

Authors:  M Akiyama; Y Minami; T Nakajima; T Moriya; S Shibata
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 5.372

7.  Nuclear entry of the circadian regulator mPER1 is controlled by mammalian casein kinase I epsilon.

Authors:  E Vielhaber; E Eide; A Rivers; Z H Gao; D M Virshup
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8.  Control of intracellular dynamics of mammalian period proteins by casein kinase I epsilon (CKIepsilon) and CKIdelta in cultured cells.

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9.  Expression of circadian rhythm genes in gonadotropin-releasing hormone-secreting GT1-7 neurons.

Authors:  Julia M A Gillespie; Beverley P K Chan; Deboleena Roy; Fang Cai; Denise D Belsham
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10.  Effect of constant light on DMBA mammary tumorigenesis in rats.

Authors:  L E Anderson; J E Morris; L B Sasser; R G Stevens
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2000-02-01       Impact factor: 8.679

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6.  Core clock regulators in dexamethasone-treated HEK 293T cells at 4 h intervals.

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