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1.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4291, 2020 08 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32855407

ABSTRACT

The annual photoperiod cycle provides the critical environmental cue synchronizing rhythms of life in seasonal habitats. In 1936, Bünning proposed a circadian-based coincidence timer for photoperiodic synchronization in plants. Formal studies support the universality of this so-called coincidence timer, but we lack understanding of the mechanisms involved. Here we show in mammals that long photoperiods induce the circadian transcription factor BMAL2, in the pars tuberalis of the pituitary, and triggers summer biology through the eyes absent/thyrotrophin (EYA3/TSH) pathway. Conversely, long-duration melatonin signals on short photoperiods induce circadian repressors including DEC1, suppressing BMAL2 and the EYA3/TSH pathway, triggering winter biology. These actions are associated with progressive genome-wide changes in chromatin state, elaborating the effect of the circadian coincidence timer. Hence, circadian clock-pituitary epigenetic pathway interactions form the basis of the mammalian coincidence timer mechanism. Our results constitute a blueprint for circadian-based seasonal timekeeping in vertebrates.


Subject(s)
ARNTL Transcription Factors/genetics , Circadian Clocks/physiology , Photoperiod , Pituitary Gland/physiology , Sheep/physiology , ARNTL Transcription Factors/metabolism , Animals , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Epigenesis, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation , Male , Melatonin/genetics , Melatonin/metabolism , Seasons
2.
Mol Endocrinol ; 27(6): 979-89, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23598442

ABSTRACT

Seasonal mammals integrate changes in the duration of nocturnal melatonin secretion to drive annual physiologic cycles. Melatonin receptors within the proximal pituitary region, the pars tuberalis (PT), are essential in regulating seasonal neuroendocrine responses. In the ovine PT, melatonin is known to influence acute changes in transcriptional dynamics coupled to the onset (dusk) and offset (dawn) of melatonin secretion, leading to a potential interval-timing mechanism capable of decoding changes in day length (photoperiod). Melatonin offset at dawn is linked to cAMP accumulation, which directly induces transcription of the clock gene Per1. The rise of melatonin at dusk induces a separate and distinct cohort, including the clock-regulated genes Cry1 and Nampt, but little is known of the up-stream mechanisms involved. Here, we used next-generation sequencing of the ovine PT transcriptome at melatonin onset and identified Npas4 as a rapidly induced basic helix-loop-helix Per-Arnt-Sim domain transcription factor. In vivo we show nuclear localization of NPAS4 protein in presumptive melatonin target cells of the PT (α-glycoprotein hormone-expressing cells), whereas in situ hybridization studies identified acute and transient expression in the PT of Npas4 in response to melatonin. In vitro, NPAS4 forms functional dimers with basic helix loop helix-PAS domain cofactors aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT), ARNT2, and ARNTL, transactivating both Cry1 and Nampt ovine promoter reporters. Using a combination of 5'-deletions and site-directed mutagenesis, we show NPAS4-ARNT transactivation to be codependent upon two conserved central midline elements within the Cry1 promoter. Our data thus reveal NPAS4 as a candidate immediate early-response gene in the ovine PT, driving molecular responses to melatonin.


Subject(s)
Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/metabolism , Cryptochromes/genetics , Melatonin/physiology , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/metabolism , Sheep, Domestic/metabolism , Animals , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/genetics , COS Cells , Chlorocebus aethiops , Conserved Sequence , Cryptochromes/metabolism , Female , Gene Expression , Male , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Protein Transport , Transcriptional Activation
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