Dynamics of the circadian clock protein PERIOD2 in living cells
Author(s) -
Rupert Öllinger,
Sandra Korge,
Thomas Korte,
Barbara Koller,
Andreas Hermann,
Achim Kramer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.384
H-Index - 278
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.156612
Subject(s) - per2 , biology , per1 , nuclear transport , circadian rhythm , cryptochrome , circadian clock , microbiology and biotechnology , nuclear export signal , importin , nuclear protein , nuclear localization sequence , cell nucleus , clock , transcription factor , genetics , nucleus , neuroscience , gene
In mammals, circadian rhythms are generated by delayed negative feedback, in which period (PER1-PER3) and cryptochrome (CRY1, CRY2) proteins gradually accumulate in the nucleus to suppress the transcription of their own genes. Although the importance of nuclear import and export signals for the subcellular localization of clock proteins is well established, little is known about the dynamics of these processes as well as their importance for the generation of circadian rhythms. We show by pharmacological perturbations of oscillating cells that nuclear import and export are of crucial importance for the circadian period. Live-cell fluorescence microscopy revealed that nuclear import of the key circadian protein PER2 is fast and further accelerated by CRY1. Moreover, PER2 nuclear import is crucially dependent on a specific nuclear-receptor-binding motif in PER2 that also mediates nuclear immobility. Nuclear export, however, is relatively slow, supporting a model of PER2 nuclear accumulation by rapid import, slow export and substantial nuclear degradation.
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