| Literature DB >> 26511603 |
Yoshiki Tsuchiya1, Yasuhiro Umemura1, Yoichi Minami1, Nobuya Koike1, Toshihiro Hosokawa2, Masayuki Hara3, Hiroshi Ito4, Hitoshi Inokawa1, Kazuhiro Yagita5.
Abstract
Most organisms have cell-autonomous circadian clocks to coordinate their activity and physiology according to 24-h environmental changes. Despite recent progress in circadian studies, it is not fully understood how the period length and the robustness of mammalian circadian rhythms are determined. In this study, we established a series of mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) lines with single or multiplex clock gene ablations using the CRISPR/Cas9-based genome editing method. ESC-based in vitro circadian clock formation assay shows that the CRISPR-mediated clock gene disruption not only reproduces the intrinsic circadian molecular rhythms of previously reported mice tissues and cells lacking clock genes but also reveals that complexed mutations, such as CKIδ(m/m):CKIε(+/m):Cry2(m/m) mutants, exhibit an additively lengthened circadian period. By using these mutant cells, we also investigated the relation between period length alteration and temperature compensation. Although CKIδ-deficient cells slightly affected the temperature insensitivity of period length, we demonstrated that the temperature compensation property is largely maintained in all mutants. These results show that the ESC-based assay system could offer a more systematic and comprehensive approach to the genotype-chronotype analysis of the intracellular circadian clockwork in mammals.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; clock genes; embryonic stem cells; period length; temperature compensation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26511603 DOI: 10.1177/0748730415613888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Rhythms ISSN: 0748-7304 Impact factor: 3.182