At noon, levels of genes and proteins throughout your body are drastically different than they are at midnight. Disruptions to this 24-hour cycle of physiological activity are why jet lag or a bad night’s sleep can alter your appetite and sleep patterns for daysāand even contribute to conditions like heart disease, sleep disorders and cancers. Now, Salk scientists et al have discovered a protein REV-ERBĪ±āthat controls the strength of this circadian rhythm in mammals. The discovery is unusual in the field, as most circadian genes and proteins only shift the timing or length of the daily cycle.
Disrupting just the amplitudeāor strengthācomponent of the circadian cycle is enough to alter hormone levels, including those that wake us up in the morning. This means that people with lower amplitude fluctuations of the genes might feel flat and have less energy during the day.
Previous research in the field revealed genes that cycle on and off throughout the day and showed how altering these circadian genes can shift the timing of the cycle and make the circadian rhythm longer or shorter than 24 hours. In 2012, Evans’ group showed that REV-ERBĪ± bound to many of these circadian genes and acted as a brake, affecting when during the day or night they were expressed.
The team analyzed levels and molecular characteristics of REV-ERBĪ± in the livers of mice throughout the day. They found that after its levels peaked during the day, 2 proteins, CDK1 and FBXW7, interacted with REV-ERBĪ± to help reduce its levels to a low point by the middle of the night. When Evans and his colleagues targeted these proteins to block the degradation of REV-ERBĪ± in the livers of mice, normal daily fluctuations in gene expression were suppressed, but the timing of the cycles wasn’t affected. Interestingly, merely altering the amplitude of the gene expression oscillations profoundly affected metabolism, disrupting levels of fats and sugars in the blood.
This is the first time scientists have discovered a way to control the amplitudeārather than the timingāof the circadian cycle. Moreover, mice that lacked REV-ERBĪ± developed fatty liver disease, stressing the importance of regulating the intensity of the cycle. “We think that if you have a ‘weak’ circadian cycle, you can’t get enough signal to affect physiology,” says Zhao. “Conversely, having an extra ‘strong’ circadian cycle would probably not be good. Evolution has given us a Goldilocks, or ‘just right,’ circadian cycle that is optimal for our health.”
The researchers hope to investigate whether pharmacological compounds that block CDK1 may have the potential to treat circadian rhythm disruptions, hence metabolic diseases and cancers related to the circadian cycle. http://www.salk.edu/news-release/powering-up-the-circadian-rhythm/
Recent Comments