PUBLICATION

Circadian Clock Synchronization of the Cell Cycle in Zebrafish Occurs through a Gating Mechanism Rather Than a Period-phase Locking Process

Authors
Laranjeiro, R., Tamai, T.K., Letton, W., Hamilton, N., Whitmore, D.
ID
ZDB-PUB-180223-13
Date
2018
Source
Journal of biological rhythms   33(2): 137-150 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Laranjeiro, Ricardo, Tamai, Takako Katherine, Whitmore, David
Keywords
T-cycle, cell cycle, entrainment, gating, zebrafish
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Cell Cycle/genetics
  • Cell Cycle/physiology*
  • Cell Line
  • Circadian Clocks*
  • Circadian Rhythm/physiology
  • Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21/genetics
  • Light
  • Photoperiod
  • Single-Cell Analysis
  • Zebrafish/genetics
  • Zebrafish/physiology*
PubMed
29444612 Full text @ J. Biol. Rhythms
Abstract
Studies from a number of model systems have shown that the circadian clock controls expression of key cell cycle checkpoints, thus providing permissive or inhibitory windows in which specific cell cycle events can occur. However, a major question remains: Is the clock actually regulating the cell cycle through such a gating mechanism or, alternatively, is there a coupling process that controls the speed of cell cycle progression? Using our light-responsive zebrafish cell lines, we address this issue directly by synchronizing the cell cycle in culture simply by changing the entraining light-dark (LD) cycle in the incubator without the need for pharmacological intervention. Our results show that the cell cycle rapidly reentrains to a shifted LD cycle within 36 h, with changes in p21 expression and subsequent S phase timing occurring within the first few hours of resetting. Reentrainment of mitosis appears to lag S phase resetting by 1 circadian cycle. The range of entrainment of the zebrafish clock to differing LD cycles is large, from 16 to 32 hour periods. We exploited this feature to explore cell cycle entrainment at both the population and single cell levels. At the population level, cell cycle length is shortened or lengthened under corresponding T-cycles, suggesting that a 1:1 coupling mechanism is capable of either speeding up or slowing down the cell cycle. However, analysis at the single cell level reveals that this, in fact, is not true and that a gating mechanism is the fundamental method of timed cell cycle regulation in zebrafish. Cell cycle length at the single cell level is virtually unaltered with varying T-cycles.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping