Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A Daily Cycle of White Collar Complex Dephosphorylation Sustains Circadian Rhythmicity in Neurospora
View through CrossRef
Abstract
As a photoreceptor, the transcription factor complex WCC acutely activates ∼5% of the genome in response to blue light, while as the circadian positive element in the dark WCC influences expression of about 40% of the transcriptome. Among WCC-regulated genes is
frq
which is both acutely light-activated through a
pLRE
and circadian-regulated through a
C-box
promoter element that is not active in constant light. The complex of FRQ, FRH, and CK1, the FFC, phosphorylates WCC at >95 sites, thereby repressing its activity and closing the circadian feedback loop in the dark. Although FFC has no described role in the light, we validated the expectation that FFC-driven WCC phosphorylation also silences
C-box
promoters in constant light, thereby confirming two classes of WCC targets,
C-box
-like that are normally repressed in the light and
pLRE
-like that remain light-active despite FFC-driven WCC phosphorylation. Genome-wide derepression of
C-box-
like promoters in
frq
-null fungi may explain reported non-circadian effects seen in some
frq
-null fungi including reduced virulence and conidiation. Reanalysis of WCC-mediated circadian activation and repression revealed that, while at dusk most WCC is phosphorylated and repressed, subsequent circadian activation is the result of transient dephosphorylation/derepression of just a small subset of this WCC pool; this small active pool drives expression of FRQ, nucleating the FFC, which rapidly re-phosphorylates the WCC pool to repress it, a phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycle that can run for days without new WCC synthesis. The realization that both FFC and WCC are regulated primarily through phosphorylation rather than turnover leaves the circadian oscillator looking much like a phoscillator, emphasizing the primacy of post-translational regulation in timekeeping.
Significance
At the core of circadian clocks of fungi and animals, a protein heterodimer drives expression of gene(s) whose products inactivate the heterodimer via phosphorylation. To sustain the cycle through multiple days, the activity of the heterodimer must be restored, but the means through which this happens have been unclear. In the clock model
Neurospora
, the White Collar Complex (WCC) is the heterodimer and FFC is the complex that inactivates it. We determined that WCC activity is restored principally by removal of the inhibitory phosphorylations and that for at least several days no new synthesis of WCC is required. The results confirm the existence of a large pool of inactive WCC in the cell and highlights the delicate balance between FCC-dependent phosphorylation/inactivation and phosphatase-dependent dephosphorylation/reactivation. Each morning, this balance allows transient activation of a fraction of the inactive WCC pool, thereby restarting the circadian cycle.
Title: A Daily Cycle of White Collar Complex Dephosphorylation Sustains Circadian Rhythmicity in
Neurospora
Description:
Abstract
As a photoreceptor, the transcription factor complex WCC acutely activates ∼5% of the genome in response to blue light, while as the circadian positive element in the dark WCC influences expression of about 40% of the transcriptome.
Among WCC-regulated genes is
frq
which is both acutely light-activated through a
pLRE
and circadian-regulated through a
C-box
promoter element that is not active in constant light.
The complex of FRQ, FRH, and CK1, the FFC, phosphorylates WCC at >95 sites, thereby repressing its activity and closing the circadian feedback loop in the dark.
Although FFC has no described role in the light, we validated the expectation that FFC-driven WCC phosphorylation also silences
C-box
promoters in constant light, thereby confirming two classes of WCC targets,
C-box
-like that are normally repressed in the light and
pLRE
-like that remain light-active despite FFC-driven WCC phosphorylation.
Genome-wide derepression of
C-box-
like promoters in
frq
-null fungi may explain reported non-circadian effects seen in some
frq
-null fungi including reduced virulence and conidiation.
Reanalysis of WCC-mediated circadian activation and repression revealed that, while at dusk most WCC is phosphorylated and repressed, subsequent circadian activation is the result of transient dephosphorylation/derepression of just a small subset of this WCC pool; this small active pool drives expression of FRQ, nucleating the FFC, which rapidly re-phosphorylates the WCC pool to repress it, a phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycle that can run for days without new WCC synthesis.
The realization that both FFC and WCC are regulated primarily through phosphorylation rather than turnover leaves the circadian oscillator looking much like a phoscillator, emphasizing the primacy of post-translational regulation in timekeeping.
Significance
At the core of circadian clocks of fungi and animals, a protein heterodimer drives expression of gene(s) whose products inactivate the heterodimer via phosphorylation.
To sustain the cycle through multiple days, the activity of the heterodimer must be restored, but the means through which this happens have been unclear.
In the clock model
Neurospora
, the White Collar Complex (WCC) is the heterodimer and FFC is the complex that inactivates it.
We determined that WCC activity is restored principally by removal of the inhibitory phosphorylations and that for at least several days no new synthesis of WCC is required.
The results confirm the existence of a large pool of inactive WCC in the cell and highlights the delicate balance between FCC-dependent phosphorylation/inactivation and phosphatase-dependent dephosphorylation/reactivation.
Each morning, this balance allows transient activation of a fraction of the inactive WCC pool, thereby restarting the circadian cycle.
Related Results
Transcriptomal dissection of soybean circadian rhythmicity in two geographically, phenotypically and genetically distinct cultivars
Transcriptomal dissection of soybean circadian rhythmicity in two geographically, phenotypically and genetically distinct cultivars
Abstract
Background
In soybean, some circadian clock genes have been identified as loci for maturity traits. However, the effects of these genes on ...
Abstract 1772: Circadian control of cell death in glioma cells treated with curcumin
Abstract 1772: Circadian control of cell death in glioma cells treated with curcumin
Abstract
Treatments based on the phytochemical curcumin have much potential for use in cancer treatments because of their effects on a wide variety of biological pat...
Abstract 1798: The human mammary circadian transcriptome.
Abstract 1798: The human mammary circadian transcriptome.
Abstract
The circadian rhythm, a phenomenon present in all of Eukaryota and in some members of Prokaryota, describes the processes within an organism that fluctuate ...
Abstract 1729: Investigating deregulated circadian clock machinery in cancer cells
Abstract 1729: Investigating deregulated circadian clock machinery in cancer cells
Abstract
The circadian clock plays an integral role in cellular functioning by temporally controlling gene expression, and there is accumulating evidence for a li...
Changes in hepatic circadian genes and liver function caused by sleep deprivation
Changes in hepatic circadian genes and liver function caused by sleep deprivation
Abstract
Background. Sleep is an essential physiological activity for human beings, while sleep deprivation (SD) has become a public health concern and causes damage to mul...
Endogenous circadian rhythm in human motor activity uncoupled from circadian influences on cardiac dynamics
Endogenous circadian rhythm in human motor activity uncoupled from circadian influences on cardiac dynamics
The endogenous circadian pacemaker influences key physiologic functions, such as body temperature and heart rate, and is normally synchronized with the sleep/wake cycle. Epidemiolo...
Abstract 6710: The oncogene MYC drives circadian clock disruption and regulates cell plasticity in early lung carcinogenesis
Abstract 6710: The oncogene MYC drives circadian clock disruption and regulates cell plasticity in early lung carcinogenesis
Abstract
Circadian rhythms coordinate the compartmentalization of biological processes, such as cell division and metabolism, to the time of the day. Disruption of t...
Abstract 4616: Oncogenic c- and N-Myc disrupt circadian rhythm.
Abstract 4616: Oncogenic c- and N-Myc disrupt circadian rhythm.
Abstract
Circadian rhythms are regulated by feedback loops comprising a network of factors that regulate Clock-associated genes. Chronotherapy seeks to take advantag...

