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Publication : Network Dynamics Mediate Circadian Clock Plasticity.

First Author  Azzi A Year  2017
Journal  Neuron Volume  93
Issue  2 Pages  441-450
PubMed ID  28065650 Mgi Jnum  J:256031
Mgi Id  MGI:6114508 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2016.12.022
Citation  Azzi A, et al. (2017) Network Dynamics Mediate Circadian Clock Plasticity. Neuron 93(2):441-450
abstractText  A circadian clock governs most aspects of mammalian behavior. Although its properties are in part genetically determined, altered light-dark environment can change circadian period length through a mechanism requiring de novo DNA methylation. We show here that this mechanism is mediated not via cell-autonomous clock properties, but rather through altered networking within the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), the circadian "master clock," which is DNA methylated in region-specific manner. DNA methylation is necessary to temporally reorganize circadian phasing among SCN neurons, which in turn changes the period length of the network as a whole. Interruption of neural communication by inhibiting neuronal firing or by physical cutting suppresses both SCN reorganization and period changes. Mathematical modeling suggests, and experiments confirm, that this SCN reorganization depends upon GABAergic signaling. Our results therefore show that basic circadian clock properties are governed by dynamic interactions among SCN neurons, with neuroadaptations in network function driven by the environment.
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