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Publication : The molecular gatekeeper Dexras1 sculpts the photic responsiveness of the mammalian circadian clock.

First Author  Cheng HY Year  2006
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  26
Issue  50 Pages  12984-95
PubMed ID  17167088 Mgi Jnum  J:116668
Mgi Id  MGI:3694814 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4253-06.2006
Citation  Cheng HY, et al. (2006) The molecular gatekeeper Dexras1 sculpts the photic responsiveness of the mammalian circadian clock. J Neurosci 26(50):12984-95
abstractText  The mammalian master clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), is exquisitely sensitive to photic timing cues, but the key molecular events that sculpt both the phasing and magnitude of responsiveness are not understood. Here, we show that the Ras-like G-protein Dexras1 is a critical factor in these processes. Dexras1-deficient mice (dexras1-/-) exhibit a restructured nighttime phase response curve and a loss of gating to photic resetting during the day. Dexras1 affects the photic sensitivity by repressing or activating time-of-day-specific signaling pathways that regulate extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). During the late night, Dexras1 limits the capacity of pituitary adenylate cyclase (PAC) activating peptide (PACAP)/PAC1 to affect ERK/MAPK, and in the early night, light-induced phase delays, which are mediated predominantly by NMDA receptors, are reduced as reported previously. Daytime photic phase advances are mediated by a novel signaling pathway that does not affect the SCN core but rather stimulates ERK/MAPK in the SCN shell and triggers downregulation of clock protein expression.
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