| Literature DB >> 25147498 |
Katarina Stojkovic1, Simon S Wing2, Nicolas Cermakian1.
Abstract
Circadian rhythms, endogenous cycles of about 24 h in physiology, are generated by a master clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus and other clocks located in the brain and peripheral tissues. Circadian disruption is known to increase the incidence of various illnesses, such as mental disorders, metabolic syndrome, and cancer. At the molecular level, periodicity is established by a set of clock genes via autoregulatory translation-transcription feedback loops. This clock mechanism is regulated by post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and ubiquitination, which set the pace of the clock. Ubiquitination in particular has been found to regulate the stability of core clock components but also other clock protein functions. Mutation of genes encoding ubiquitin ligases can cause either elongation or shortening of the endogenous circadian period. Recent research has also started to uncover roles for deubiquitination in the molecular clockwork. Here, we review the role of the ubiquitin pathway in regulating the circadian clock and we propose that ubiquitination is a key element in a clock protein modification code that orchestrates clock mechanisms and circadian behavior over the daily cycle.Entities:
Keywords: circadian clock; clock gene; deubiquitinase; stability; ubiquitin; ubiquitin ligase
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147498 PMCID: PMC4124793 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2014.00069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Ubiquitin-modifying enzymes involved in the regulation of mammalian clock proteins.
| Clock protein | Mammalian enzyme | Phenotype of mice, tissues, or cells upon loss-of-function mutation or knock-down of ubiquitin-modifying enzyme | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRY1/2 | FBXL3 | Long free-running period of locomotor activity rhythms, cultured fibroblasts and SCN; stabilized CRYs; dampened and delayed rhythms of | ||
| FBXL21 | Normal or short free-running period of locomotor activity rhythms; short period of cultured fibroblasts, SCN and pituitary; destabilized CRYs (when subcellular fractions were studied, the mutation stabilized CRY1 in cytoplasm and destabilized it in the nucleus); mutation partly rescues | |||
| PER1/2 | β-TRCP1 (FBW1A), β-TRCP2 (FBW1B) | Dampened or long-period rhythms in fibroblasts; stabilized PERs; | SLIMB | |
| REV-ERBα | HUWE1 (ARF-BP1) | Stabilized REV-ERBα, decreased | CG8184 | |
| PAM (MYCBP2) | Stabilized REV-ERBα, decreased | Highwire | ||
| FBXL3? | Long-period phenotype of | |||
| BMAL1 | UBE3A | Dampening and longer period of circadian rhythms in cultured fibroblasts. | dUBE3A | |
| CRY1 | USP2 | Decreased CRY1 protein levels in liver (with | ||
| PER1 | USP2 | Slightly elongated free-running period of locomotor activity rhythms; altered response to light; altered clock gene expression and increased levels of ubiquitinated PER1 in fibroblasts; no change in PER1 stability; alteration in the timing of PER1 intracellular localization. | ||
| BMAL1 | USP2 | Normal free-running period and slightly altered light response; reduced BMAL1 levels in the SCN. | ||