FB2025_01 , released February 20, 2025
Reference Report
Open Close
Reference
Citation
Mahesh, G., Jeong, E., Ng, F.S., Liu, Y., Gunawardhana, K., Houl, J.H., Yildirim, E., Amunugama, R., Jones, R., Allen, D.L., Edery, I., Kim, E.Y., Hardin, P.E. (2014). Phosphorylation of the Transcription Activator CLOCK Regulates Progression through a ∼24-h Feedback Loop to Influence the Circadian Period in Drosophila.  J. Biol. Chem. 289(28): 19681--19693.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0225583
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Circadian (≅24 h) clocks control daily rhythms in metabolism, physiology, and behavior in animals, plants, and microbes. In Drosophila, these clocks keep circadian time via transcriptional feedback loops in which CLOCK-CYCLE (CLK-CYC) initiates transcription of period (per) and timeless (tim), accumulating levels of PER and TIM proteins feed back to inhibit CLK-CYC, and degradation of PER and TIM allows CLK-CYC to initiate the next cycle of transcription. The timing of key events in this feedback loop are controlled by, or coincide with, rhythms in PER and CLK phosphorylation, where PER and CLK phosphorylation is high during transcriptional repression. PER phosphorylation at specific sites controls its subcellular localization, activity, and stability, but comparatively little is known about the identity and function of CLK phosphorylation sites. Here we identify eight CLK phosphorylation sites via mass spectrometry and determine how phosphorylation at these sites impacts behavioral and molecular rhythms by transgenic rescue of a new Clk null mutant. Eliminating phosphorylation at four of these sites accelerates the feedback loop to shorten the circadian period, whereas loss of CLK phosphorylation at serine 859 increases CLK activity, thereby increasing PER levels and accelerating transcriptional repression. These results demonstrate that CLK phosphorylation influences the circadian period by regulating CLK activity and progression through the feedback loop.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC4094078 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
Associated Information
Comments
Associated Files
Other Information
Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    J. Biol. Chem.
    Title
    Journal of Biological Chemistry
    Publication Year
    1905-
    ISBN/ISSN
    0021-9258
    Data From Reference
    Aberrations (2)
    Alleles (12)
    Genes (3)
    Cell Lines (1)
    Natural transposons (1)
    Insertions (3)
    Experimental Tools (1)
    Transgenic Constructs (9)