CRY Drives Cyclic CK2-Mediated BMAL1 Phosphorylation to Control the Mammalian Circadian Clock

  • T Tamaru
  • , M Hattori
  • , K Honda
  • , Y Nakahata
  • , P Sassone-Corsi
  • , Bert van der Horst
  • , T Ozawa
  • , K Takamatsu

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42 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Intracellular circadian clocks, composed of clock genes that act in transcription-translation feedback loops, drive global rhythmic expression of the mammalian transcriptome and allow an organism to anticipate to the momentum of the day. Using a novel clock-perturbing peptide, we established a pivotal role for casein kinase (CK)-2-mediated circadian BMAL1-Ser90 phosphorylation (BMAL1-P) in regulating central and peripheral core clocks. Subsequent analysis of the underlying mechanism showed a novel role of CRY as a repressor for protein kinase. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments and real-time monitoring of protein-protein interactions revealed that CRY-mediated periodic binding of CK23 to BMAL1 inhibits BMAL1 -Ser90 phosphorylation by CK2a. The FAD binding domain of CRY1, two C-terminal BMAL1 domains, and particularly BMAL1-Lys537 acetylation/deacetylation by CLOCK/SIRT1, were shown to be critical for CRY-mediated BMAL1-CK23 binding. Reciprocally, BMAL1-Ser90 phosphorylation is prerequisite for BMAL1-Lys537 acetylation. We propose a dual negative-feedback model in which a CRY-dependent CK2-driven posttranslational BMAL1-P-BMAL1 loop is an integral part of the core clock oscillator.
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
JournalPLoS Biology (online)
Volume13
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

Research programs

  • EMC MGC-01-12-03

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