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Publication : New reporter system for Per1 and Bmal1 expressions revealed self-sustained circadian rhythms in peripheral tissues.

First Author  Nishide SY Year  2006
Journal  Genes Cells Volume  11
Issue  10 Pages  1173-82
PubMed ID  16999737 Mgi Jnum  J:147393
Mgi Id  MGI:3840420 Doi  10.1111/j.1365-2443.2006.01015.x
Citation  Nishide SY, et al. (2006) New reporter system for Per1 and Bmal1 expressions revealed self-sustained circadian rhythms in peripheral tissues. Genes Cells 11(10):1173-82
abstractText  A new reporter system for monitoring expressions of two clock genes, Per1 and Bmal1, from a single tissue in culture was developed in mice. Reporters are Vargula hilgendorfii luciferase (VL) and firefly luciferase (FL), whose activities are increased in parallel with Per1 and Bmal1 expressions, respectively. Formal properties of the circadian system in transgenic mice are indistinguishable from those in wild-type animals. Circadian rhythms in Per1-VL and Bmal1-FL in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) were robust and anti-phasic, although they were phase delayed by 4-8 h as compared with circadian rhythms in respective transcript levels in vivo. In peripheral tissues such as liver, circadian rhythms in Bmal1-FL persisted for more than 3 weeks. In the course of prolonged culture, circadian rhythms apparently damped out, but were restored immediately by refreshment of the culture medium. Restoration of the circadian rhythm is unlikely to be due to resetting of desynchronized population oscillation, because peripheral circadian rhythms did not show a type 0 phase response curve (PRC) for medium refreshment, a requirement for instantaneous resetting of circadian oscillation. Long-term persistence of circadian oscillation in spite of external perturbations supports an idea that circadian oscillations in peripheral tissues are self-sustained.
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