Mammalian Cry1 and Cry2 are essential for maintenance of circadian rhythms (original) (raw)
- Letter
- Published: 15 April 1999
- Manja Muijtjens1,
- Kumiko Kobayashi2,
- Riya Takano2,
- Shin-ichiro Kanno2,
- Masashi Takao2,
- Jan de Wit1,
- Anton Verkerk1,
- Andre P. M. Eker1,
- Dik van Leenen3,
- Ruud Buijs4,
- Dirk Bootsma1,
- Jan H. J. Hoeijmakers1 &
- …
- Akira Yasui2
Nature volume 398, pages 627–630 (1999)Cite this article
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Abstract
Many biochemical, physiological and behavioural processes show circadian rhythms which are generated by an internal time-keeping mechanism referred to as the biological clock. According to rapidly developing models, the core oscillator driving this clockis composed of an autoregulatory transcription–(post) translation-based feedback loop involving a set of ‘clock’ genes1,6. Molecular clocks do not oscillate with an exact 24-hour rhythmicity but are entrained to solar day/night rhythms by light. The mammalian proteins Cry1 and Cry2, which are members of the family of plant blue-light receptors (cryptochromes) and photolyases, have been proposed as candidate light receptors for photoentrainment of the biological clock7,8,9,10. Here we show that mice lacking the Cry1 or Cry2 protein display accelerated and delayed free-running periodicity of locomotor activity, respectively. Strikingly, in the absence of both proteins, an instantaneous and complete loss of free-running rhythmicity is observed. This suggests that, in addition to a possible photoreceptor and antagonistic clock-adjusting function, both proteins are essential for the maintenance of circadian rhythmicity.
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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Miyazaki for help with construction of targeting vectors, and Y.Tsukahara and S. Okano for discussions on circadian rhythms. M. Kuit is acknowledged for photographic work. This work was supported in part by grants from the Dutch Cancer Society, the Association for International Cancer Research, Human Frontier Science, The Louis Jeantet Foundation and the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan, and by a Spinoza premium of the Dutch Scientific Organization NWO.
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Authors and Affiliations
- Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, MGC, Erasmus University, PO Box 1738, DR Rotterdam, 3000, The Netherlands
Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst, Manja Muijtjens, Jan de Wit, Anton Verkerk, Andre P. M. Eker, Dirk Bootsma & Jan H. J. Hoeijmakers - Department of Molecular Genetics, Institute of Development, Aging and Cancer, Tohoku University, Sendai, 980-8575, Japan
Kumiko Kobayashi, Riya Takano, Shin-ichiro Kanno, Masashi Takao & Akira Yasui - Department of Clinical Genetics, MGC, Erasmus University, PO Box 1738, Rotterdam, 3000, DR, The Netherlands
Dik van Leenen - Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Meibergdreef 33, Amsterdam, 1105, AZ, The Netherlands
Ruud Buijs
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Horst, G., Muijtjens, M., Kobayashi, K. et al. Mammalian Cry1 and Cry2 are essential for maintenance of circadian rhythms.Nature 398, 627–630 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/19323
- Received: 27 November 1998
- Accepted: 08 March 1999
- Issue Date: 15 April 1999
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/19323