| Literature DB >> 29271044 |
Munehiro Ohashi1,2, Yasuhiro Umemura1, Nobuya Koike1, Yoshiki Tsuchiya1, Yutaka Inada1, Hitomi Watanabe3, Tomoko Tanaka4, Yoichi Minami1, Osamu Ukimura2, Tsuneharu Miki2, Tatsuro Tajiri4, Gen Kondoh3, Yasuhiro Yamada5, Kazuhiro Yagita1.
Abstract
The circadian clock, which regulates cellular physiology, such as energy metabolism, resides in each cell level throughout the body. Recently, it has been elucidated that the cellular circadian clock is closely linked with cellular differentiation. Moreover, the misregulation of cellular differentiation in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) induced abnormally differentiated cells with impaired circadian clock oscillation, concomitant with the post-transcriptional suppression of CLOCK proteins. Here, we show that the circadian molecular oscillation is disrupted in dysdifferentiation-mediated mouse kidney tumors induced by partial in vivo reprogramming, resembling Wilms tumors. The expression of CLOCK protein was dramatically reduced in the tumor cells despite the Clock mRNA expression. We also showed that a similar loss of CLOCK was observed in human Wilms tumors, suggesting that the circadian molecular clockwork may be disrupted in dysdifferentiation-mediated embryonal tumors such as Wilms tumors, similar to the in vivo reprogramming-induced mouse kidney tumors. These results support our previous reports and may provide a novel viewpoint for understanding the pathophysiological nature of cancers through the correlation between cellular differentiation and circadian clock.Entities:
Keywords: CLOCK; Wilms tumor; cellular differentiation; circadian clock; dysdifferentiation; in vivo reprogramming
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29271044 DOI: 10.1111/gtc.12552
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Cells ISSN: 1356-9597 Impact factor: 1.891