Previous Article | Next Article 
Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2001, p. 1207-1217, Vol. 21, No. 4
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.4.1207-1217.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Wild-Type Circadian Rhythmicity Is Dependent on
Closely Spaced E Boxes in the Drosophila timeless
Promoter
Michael J.
McDonald,1
Michael
Rosbash,*,1,2 and
Patrick
Emery1,2
Department of Biology, National Science
Foundation Center for Biological
Timing,1 and Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, Brandeis University,2
Waltham, Massachusetts 02454
Received 3 October 2000/Returned for modification 7 November
2000/Accepted 15 November 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Transcriptional regulation plays an important role in
Drosophila melanogaster circadian
rhythms. The period promoter has been well studied, but
the timeless promoter has not been analyzed in detail.
Mutagenesis of the canonical E box in the timeless promoter reduces but does not eliminate timeless mRNA
cycling or locomotor activity rhythms. This is because there are at
least two other cis-acting elements close to the
canonical E box, which can also be transactivated by the circadian
transcription factor dCLOCK. These E-box-like sequences cooperate with
the canonical E-box element to promote high-amplitude transcription,
which is necessary for wild-type rhythmicity.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Many eukaryotic and some
prokaryotic organisms regulate their metabolisms, physiology, and
behavior with a circadian (~24-h) period. These rhythms have been
shown to involve complex feedback circuits involving transcriptional
regulation in a diverse set of organisms, including fungi, plants,
cyanobacteria, insects, and higher mammals such as mice and humans.
These feedback loops appear inextricably linked to the oscillation of
central pacemaker components with circadian periodicity.
The current model for the circadian pacemaker of Drosophila
melanogaster (10, 11, 44) posits that two basic
helix-loop-helix PAS (for Period-Arnt-Sim) domain-containing
transcription factors, CLOCK (dCLK) and CYCLE (CYC), activate
transcription of the period (per) and timeless
(tim) genes by binding to E-box elements (CACGTG) in
the promoter regions of these genes (1, 3, 9, 42). Levels
of per and tim mRNA increase throughout the day
and peak in the early evening (19, 45). PER and TIM
proteins reach their peak some 4 to 6 h later (12,
56). PER levels accumulate slowly, due to destabilization
through phosphorylation by the doubletime protein kinase
(DBT), a D. melanogaster homolog of mammalian casein kinase
1
(25, 31, 38). Increasing amounts of TIM lead to PER
stabilization through dimerization (39). PER-TIM
dimers then translocate to the nucleus (43, 53), where they then interact with dCLK and CYC (2, 28). Formation of this complex decreases dCLK-CYC-mediated transcription and invokes the
negative limb of the pacemaker feedback loop by preventing dCLK-CYC
binding to the E box (9, 29). This negative feedback is
abrogated by light-mediated TIM degradation, which restarts the next
cycle (22, 30, 34, 50, 55, 56). There might also be
positive feedback, in which PER and TIM lead to an increase in
transcription factor synthesis (16a, 28).
Strong genetic evidence from mammals supports the notion that the
mCLOCK (dCLK orthologue) and BMAL1 (CYCLE orthologue) family of
transcription factors is central to pacemaker transcriptional regulation. mCLOCK-BMAL1-dependent transcriptional cycling has been
shown previously for mper1, mper2, mper3, mcry1,
mcry2, dbp, and vasopressin
transcripts, which fail to oscillate in mCLOCK mutant mice (23,
24, 26, 35, 40). In cell culture reporter assays, mCLOCK-BMAL1
has been shown to activate transcription from E boxes in the
mper1, vasopressin, and dbp promoters
(16, 23, 26, 40). In Drosophila, the importance
of dCLK-CYC-mediated transcription is readily observable in the clock
mutants jrk and cyc0, which are
arrhythmic and lack oscillations in both per and
tim mRNA (1, 42). Furthermore, S2 cell
transfection assays demonstrate that dCLK-CYC activates transcription
through E boxes in the period, timeless, and
vrille promoters (7, 9).
The most extensive transcriptional studies in Drosophila
circadian biology have centered on the period gene promoter.
A promoterless per transgene, 7.2, was found to partially
rescue arrhythmic per0 flies
(15). The weak molecular cycling of the 7.2 transcript was
attributed to posttranscriptional mechanisms (46). It was also demonstrated previously that per requires at least two
sequences, one in the promoter and one in the 5' coding sequence, to
fully rescue wild-type per-like cycling and PER expression
(48). Hao et al. (18) discovered that a
per promoter 69-bp clock regulatory sequence (CRS)
containing an E box was sufficient to generate 5- to 10-fold
oscillations of a lacZ reporter RNA. Deletions in either the
5' or 3' half site of the period E box along with
surrounding nucleotides led to decreases in reporter levels and lower
amplitudes of cycling, indicating the importance of the E-box region
but also suggesting that sequences other than the E box within the 69-bp CRS contribute to cycling. These sequences have yet to be identified. In S2 cells, dCLK and CYC were shown to activate
transcription from a luciferase reporter fused to a tetramerized 14-mer
centered around the per E box. The activation was blocked by
a central 2-bp inversion of the E-box sequence (9).
Subsequent experiments have shown that dCLK and CYC physically bind
this E-box sequence and that the binding is abrogated by the same
central 2-bp inversion in the E-box core sequence (29).
These experiments firmly establish the per E box as a
central component of circadian transcriptional regulation.
In contrast, there are no published reports investigating the
importance of the timeless promoter to the circadian
pacemaker. The following study presents a detailed analysis of the
elements controlling tim transcription. We distinguish
between the contributions of two canonical E boxes and two noncanonical
E boxes within the tim promoter. In addition, we describe a
role for a novel sequence element that might contribute to
Drosophila circadian transcription.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Constructs.
All constructs involving PCR-amplified fragments
were confirmed by sequencing. All tim
promoter-tim cDNA constructs originated from a
tim+ rescue transgene (see Fig. 1 in
reference 41) referred to here as 4.5-kb tim.
The 4.5-kb tim construct was truncated to a 2.5-kb construct
using the XbaI site at position 2512. The 1.5-kb construct was made by truncating the construct to the AatII site at
position 1587. The constructs that contain 1,082 bp or less of promoter were made by PCR, introducing a NotI site at the 5' end
(except for timpDEAD, in which an NsiI
site was used). These fragments were ligated back into the 4.5-kb
tim parent construct utilizing the 5' NotI site
(see Fig. 1 in reference 41). The truncation constructs used as reporters in S2 cell transfection experiments were created by
PCR using timpFL as a template and introducing a
SacII site at the 5' end and a XhoI site at +26.
Three-way ligations were performed among these fragments, a
SalI-BamHI luciferase cDNA fragment (pJD261
plasmid [32]), and the pMECA vector (a kind gift from
Wayne Parrot, University of Georgia) cut with
SacII-BamHI. Substitution constructs were created
using PCR, and mainly transversion mutations were created. All mutated
DNA elements contain a BglII site. To make the
transformation vectors for luciferase-bearing flies, the S2 cell
constructs were digested with SacII-BamHI and
cloned into those sites of the pCaSpeR 4 transformation vector
(52). The per constructs were made using PCR
with PLO-LUC (8) as a template. These PCR products contain
SacII sites at their 5' end (
713) and SalI
sites at their 3' end (+9) and were cloned with luciferase into pMECA
as described above. In S2 cell transfections, the pAC-dCLK construct
used was created by introducing a NotI site at position 3029 in pBS-SK(
) clock by site-directed mutagenesis. An EagI digest of this cDNA clone was then ligated into the NotI
site of Invitrogen's pAc5.1-V5/HIS vector.
Transgenic flies.
y w virgin females (luciferase
constructs) and y w;tim0 virgin females
(rescue constructs) were crossed to y
w0; KiPP
(2-3) and y
w;tim0; KiPP
(2-3) males, respectively. Flies were kept in
bottles for 2 days and then transferred to a collecting cage for 2 days. Embryos were collected every hour and dechorionated with forceps.
Embryos were fixed to double-sided tape on a glass slide and grouped by 2-min intervals. After being dried for about 10 min, embryos were covered with a thin layer of halocarbon oil (series 700; Halocarbon Production Corp.). Embryos were injected with Qiagen Midiprep DNA at a
concentration of 0.5 µg/µl in 5 mM KCl-0.1 mM
PO4 (pH 7.8) buffer containing 10% green food
coloring. Injected embryos were kept in a humidified chamber in a
25°C incubator overnight, and surviving larvae were picked into fresh
vials the next day. Adults were crossed to y w virgin
females or y w;tim0 virgins (rescue
constructs), and transformants were judged by eye color. Transformants
were balanced, and then lines were established. The lines analyzed
biochemically and behaviorally are as follows: timpFL.1 (756-43.1),
timpFLmut.1 (756-15.1),
timpFLmut.2 (756-23.1),
timpMIN.1 (624-39.1), and
timpDEAD.1 (522/Y). When requesting lines, please
request the numerical identifier for the line.
Transfection assays.
S2 cells were maintained at high
density in HyQ-SFX insect medium (HyClone Laboratories, Inc.)
supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (GIBCO) and 10 mg of
penicillin-streptomycin (Sigma) per ml. S2 cells at a density of
106 per ml in HyQ-SFX-lacking serum were plated
in six-well tissue culture plates (Costar Corp.). Twenty-four hours
later, the medium was aspirated and replaced with 1 ml of transfection
mix. This mix consists of HyQ-SFX-lacking serum containing 20 µl of
Geneporter reagent (Gene Therapy Systems), 500 ng of reporter DNA, 25 ng of Renilla reniformis luciferase reporter under the
control of the copia promoter, and either 100 ng of
pAC-clockV5 or empty vector incubated at room temperature for 45 min.
Transfection was stopped by adding 1 ml of serum containing HyQ-SFX
medium. Cell lysates were prepared with Promega's dual luciferase
reporter assay system per the manufacturer's instructions.
Photinus pyralis luciferase activity was measured with a
Wallace, Inc., TD20/20 luminometer and normalized to the
Renilla luciferase activity.
Fly head Western blots.
Flies were collected at the
appropriate time point, and protein extracts were prepared from the
homogenization of 30 heads in 30 µl of extraction buffer
(12). PER and TIM Western blots were performed as
described in reference 56. Western blots were quantified
using the Molecular Analyst program (Bio-Rad).
RNase protection assays (RPAs).
Fifty heads were homogenized
with a motorized pestle in 500 µl of TRIZOL reagent (GIBCO). RNA was
precipitated according to the manufacturer's suggestions. RNA was
resuspended in 50 µl of diethyl pyrocarbonate-treated water-50 µl
of DNA digestion mix (40 mM Tris [pH 8], 6 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM NaCl, 5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.05 mg of
bovine serum albumin per ml, 0.4 U of RNasin [Promega] per µl, and
0.05 U of RQ1 DNase [Promega] per µl). The mixture was incubated at
37°C for 1 h and then phenol-chloroform extracted twice and
precipitated overnight at
80°C. The mRNA was resuspended in 50 µl
of hybridization buffer (13). The period 2-3,
tim, and rp49 probes have been described previously
(33, 49). Probes (1 × 106 cpm
of per2/3 and tim probes and 2.5 × 105 cpm of rp49 probe) were added to
each reaction mixture and heated to 95°C for 5 min and then at 50°C
overnight. RNA was digested with 15 U of RNase I (Promega) for 1 h
at 37°C and then phenol-chloroform extracted twice and precipitated
for 1 h at
80°C. The samples were resuspended in 10 µl of
loading dye (80% formamide, 0.1% xylene cyanol, 0.1% bromphenol
blue) and resolved on a 5% sequencing gel. Quantification was carried
out using a Bio-Rad GS-363 phosphorimager and Molecular Analyst software.
In vivo luciferase monitoring.
The assays were performed
essentially as described in reference 48. Monitoring of
luciferase activity was performed every half hour for 7 days. The first
2 days' data were discarded, and the remaining data were analyzed
using the I-and-A program (36). Lines
timpFL-LUC.1 and
timpFL-LUC/PERR.3 each displayed levels that were
about twofold higher than those of their respective sister lines and
were reproducible in all flies tested in those lines. The enhanced
levels in these lines are most likely due to position effects. In our
analysis, these were the only cases of significant variations between
different lines in the same genotype.
Behavioral analysis.
Fly circadian behavior was analyzed as
described previously (41).
 |
RESULTS |
The tim E-box region is dispensable for rhythmic
locomotor activity.
To begin a study of tim
transcriptional regulation, we generated several different
tim promoter-tim cDNA transgenic lines in a
tim0 background. In the initial behavioral
characterization of these lines, constructs harboring 756 bp or more of
tim promoter displayed only small differences from a
construct bearing 2.5 kb of tim promoter (Table
1). Within this 756-bp region of the
tim promoter, there is a 9-bp canonical E-box sequence,
CACGTGAGC, which is conserved in the 69-bp CRS
of the period gene promoter. Flies with the 756-bp promoter
construct had 26-h periods and were named timpFL,
for tim promoter full-length. Flies that carry a
timpFL transgene with a mutated E box,
CTCGAG, termed
timpFLmut (Fig. 1),
displayed substantially longer periods, from 28 to 29.5 h for the
three lines tested (Table 1). Lines that contain the minimal amount of
tim promoter rescuing behavior,
timpMIN, lack this E box and surrounding region
but still manifest periods of ~29 to 30 h, similar to the three
timpFLmut lines (Table 1). Lines possessing a
further truncated promoter, timpDEAD, are
arrhythmic (Fig. 1). These data allow us to conclude that sequences
other than this E box can contribute to tim transcription and that there is some important promoter element necessary to achieve
behavioral rhythmicity in the region present in
timpMIN but absent in
timpDEAD, between
624 and
522 (Fig. 1).

View larger version (11K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 1.
Diagram of tim
promoter-tim transgenes. Shown are the
tim promoter-tim constructs (right) used
to obtain the lines analyzed (left). The genomic sequence reaches 3' to
the SalI site at +2206 and then is fused to the
tim cDNA. timpFL and
timpFLmut begin at 756, timpMIN
begins at 624, and timpDEAD begins at 522. The
E-box and mutant E-box sequences are shown. The transcription start
site is marked by the arrow.
|
|
tim mRNA levels strongly influence TIM levels and
the strength of behavioral rescue.
To assay tim mRNA
levels in these transgenic flies, heads were collected from entrained
flies, sacrificed at peak and trough times, and subjected to mRNA
analysis by RPA (Fig. 2). These times were selected based on an extended time point analysis for each strain
(data not shown). Biochemical analysis was performed on a
representative line from each genotype, but two
timpFLmut lines were analyzed because they showed
a 1-h period difference.

View larger version (81K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2.
LD and DD tim and per
mRNA profiles of tim promoter-tim
transgenic lines. The mRNA levels for per,
tim, tim0, and
rp49 were measured in tim
promoter-tim transgenic lines and Canton S flies by RPA
in LD (12-h light; 12-h dark) and DD (constant darkness) conditions.
"tim" denotes the transgene mRNA,
"per" and "tim0" are
endogenous per and tim0
mRNAs, and "rp49" is the normalization control.
The genotypes are indicated. (A) A representative RPA of fly heads from
flies sacrificed at high (ZT15) and low (ZT3) zeitgeber time points in
LD cycles. (B) Quantitation of per and transgenic
tim mRNAs from four LD experiments. (C) A
representative RPA of fly heads from flies sacrificed at high (CT15)
and low (CT3) circadian time points in the first day of DD after
entraining for 3 days of 12:12 LD cycles. (D) Quantitation of
per and transgenic tim mRNAs from two
DD experiments.
|
|
In wild-type flies, tim mRNA cycles 5.5-fold in
12-h-light-12-h-dark conditions (LD) and 7.25-fold in constant-dark
conditions (DD) (Fig. 2). These values are lower than previously
published data (20, 45, 46), probably due to
relatively high background levels and consequent difficulties in
accurately quantifying mRNA at trough time points. Cycling
amplitudes and peak tim mRNA levels progressively diminish
from line timpFL.1 to
timpFLmut.1, timpFLmut.2,
timpMIN.1, and
timpDEAD.1, in both LD and DD. The residual
tim mRNA cycling in lines
timpFLmut.1 and timpFLmut.2
(Fig. 2) indicates that sequences other than this E box contribute to
circadian transcription. Line timpMIN.1 has
barely detectable tim mRNA levels (visible on the
autoradiograms but not in Fig. 2) that do not appear to cycle,
suggesting that low levels of noncycling tim mRNA are
adequate to rescue behavior (Fig. 2). tim mRNA in line
timpDEAD.1 was not detectable, indicating that a
critical region of the promoter is present in
timpMIN.1 but absent in
timpDEAD.1 (Fig. 2A and C), i.e., between
624
and
522.
We also assayed cycling from the per and
tim0 genes in these transgenic strains.
Both mRNAs cycle with similar amplitudes in CS,
timpFL.1, timpFLmut.1, and
timpFLmut.2 (except
tim0 in CS, because there is no
tim0 gene in this strain) (Fig. 2). The
amplitude is reduced in lines timpMIN.1 and
timpDEAD.1, principally due to an increase in
mRNA levels at trough time points (Fig. 2A and C). This is probably
a consequence of decreased negative feedback on these promoters due to
low TIM levels (Fig. 3A and B). Western
blots show that TIM oscillations closely follow the tim
mRNA profiles, both in cycling amplitude and in levels (Fig. 2A and
C, 3A and B, and Fig. 4). The transgenic
lines show progressively lower amounts of TIM, from
timpFL.1 through timpMIN.1.
This correlates well with progressively weaker behavioral rescue, both
in period length and in percentage of arrhythmic flies. Line timpDEAD.1, which is arrhythmic, has barely
discernible levels of TIM (Fig. 3A and B, Fig. 4, and Table 1).

View larger version (41K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3.
PER and TIM protein levels in tim
promoter-tim transgenic lines. Representative LD and DD
Western blots for PER and TIM in the tim
promoter-tim transgenic lines. Protein extracts were
made from heads of flies collected at high (ZT19 and CT19) and low (ZT7
and CT7) time points. Arrows denote the band of interest. Western blots
from LD experiments were probed for TIM (A) and then stripped and
reprobed for PER (C). Western blots from flies sacrificed on the first
day of DD entrainment were probed for TIM (B) and then stripped and
reprobed for PER (D).
|
|

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4.
Quantification of TIM Western blots. Shown are the
results of quantitation of TIM protein levels from the different
tim promoter-tim transgenic lines under
LD and DD conditions (three experiments). The graph represents the
amplitude of TIM cycling in head extracts between high (ZT19 and CT19)
and low (ZT7 and CT7) time points.
|
|
The cycling amplitude and levels of PER were moderately affected in
lines timpFL.1,
timpFLmut.1, and
timpFLmut.2 compared to CS (Fig. 3C and D). In
line timpMIN.1, PER does not cycle in LD but does
cycle in DD (Fig. 3C and D). An extended time point analysis in this
strain confirmed that PER levels in LD are moderately high and stable
and do not undergo cyclic phosphorylation, whereas PER levels in DD
cycle both in amplitude and in phosphorylation state and have a
lengthened period as expected (data not shown). In summary,
tim mRNA levels largely determine TIM levels, and these
determine the strength of behavioral rescue and period length.
The intronic E box does not significantly contribute to
tim transcription in S2 cells.
The murine
dbp and per1 promoters, as well as the human
per1 promoter, have multiple E boxes that contribute to
transcriptional activation (16, 40, 51, 54). In
Drosophila, period and vrille also
contain multiple E boxes in their promoters, although functional roles
for all of these E boxes have not been confirmed (7;
M. J. McDonald and M. Rosbash, unpublished observations). Through
sequence searching, we found an additional canonical E box in the first
intron of timeless at bp +1810. To assess whether this E box
also contributes to tim transcription, we generated tim promoter-luciferase fusions with the upstream and
intronic E-box regions mutated in various combinations (Fig.
5A) and compared the transcriptional
activities of the constructs with an S2 cell-dCLK cotransfection assay
(9).

View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 5.
Truncation and substitutional mutagenesis of
tim promoter. Black bars represent the induction of
luciferase activity from tim-luciferase transgenes in S2
cells cotransfected with 100 ng of pAC-dCLK (see Materials and
Methods). Standard deviations are indicated. (A) The contributions of
the upstream and intronic E boxes were measured by mutating the E boxes
(mutated E boxes are crossed out). In the far right panel, white bars
represent the values of luciferase activity measured from reporters in
non-dCLK-cotransfected cells (baseline values). The baseline value of
the timpFLmut-LUC construct was normalized to the
baseline value obtained from the timpFL-LUC construct.
The baseline values for all intron-containing constructs were
normalized to the baseline value obtained for the
timpFL-LUC/wt intron construct. (B) Sequence of the
tim promoter region 756 to 522. The sequence
elements that were mutated are boxed, and their names as referred to in
the text are shown above the boxes. (C) Truncation constructs of the
tim promoter. The elements are outlined by boxes with
the name of the element above the box. (D) Substitutional mutagenesis
of the elements within the tim promoter, as shown in
panel C. The timpFL-LUC E-box construct contains an
AGATCT substitution for the E box (CACGTG),
whereas timpFLmut-LUC contains the sequence
CTCGAG.
|
|
In these S2 cell experiments, an intronic E-box mutation had little
effect on dCLK-mediated transcriptional activation of constructs with
either an intact or mutated upstream E box. In fact, addition of the
intronic E-box region decreased transcription twofold (Fig. 5A, compare
timpFL-LUC to
timpFL-LUC/wt), suggesting that the intronic E
box does not play an important role in tim transcription.
This is consistent with the fact that timpDEAD.1
flies do not produce detectable levels of tim mRNA or
rescue behavior and is consistent with the very weak activity of the timpDEAD-LUC construct in S2 cells (Table 1, Fig.
2A and C, and Fig. 5B).
Although consistent with previously published observations (7,
9), the very weak activation of the
timpFLmut-LUC reporter by dCLK is misleading;
luciferase activity from this construct in dCLK-transfected cells is
about one-half to two-thirds of the activity of the intact E box, the
timpFL-LUC construct (Fig. 5A and data not
shown). This parallels the data for flies, in which peak tim
mRNA levels in timpFLmut flies are 50 to 60%
of the levels in timpFL flies (Fig. 2 and data
not shown). The weak fold activation in S2 cells is due to the baseline
luciferase activity of the timpFLmut-LUC being
~24-fold higher than that of the timpFL-LUC
reporter in non-dCLK-transfected cells (Fig. 5A, far right panel). All
constructs tested with a mutated upstream E box exhibit dramatically enhanced reporter activity in non-dCLK-transfected cells (Fig. 5A, far
right panel). This might reflect a transcriptional repressor that
recognizes an intact E box in S2 cells. In contrast, there are not
large increases in tim mRNA levels at the trough time point ZT3 or CT3 in timpFLmut.1 or
timpFLmut.2 flies (Fig. 2A and C) compared to
levels for timpFL flies. This suggests that the
elevated baseline transcription is an S2 cell phenomenon and that other
mechanisms exist in flies to suppress tim transcription in
the absence of a functional E box. This phenomenon was specific to the
tim promoter and was seen only with a mutation in the E box.
In short, the data indicate that activation of tim reporter
constructs with mutated E boxes by dCLK-CYC in S2 cells is
substantially underestimated. They also indicate that
cis-acting regions other than the canonical E box contribute
to tim transcriptional activity.
The region 5' of the tim E box contributes to
transcriptional activity.
To verify that other regions contribute
to tim transcription, we truncated
timpFL-LUC from the 5' end and measured the
luciferase reporter activity when cotransfected with dCLK into S2 cells
(Fig. 5C). We had previously identified the W box, an NF-1-like binding
site which might possibly contribute to activity of the tim
promoter (47). Searching the tim promoter
sequence with the TransFac database for other possible transcription
factor binding sites near the E box yielded no significant similarities
to known binding sites. Scanning the sequence manually revealed two
11-bp Tim E-box-like repeats, TER1 and TER2 (Fig. 5B).
Additionally, a sequence comparison between the per and
tim promoters detected what we term the PER repeat, PERR, a
conserved 10-bp sequence.
timp701-LUC lacks the W-box element and is
activated by dCLK 2.7 times less well than is
timpFL-LUC. This suggests that the W box or
another nearby sequence element plays a small role in tim
transcription (Fig. 5C). Truncating the promoter to
timp687-LUC causes a dramatic 20-fold decrease in
reporter activity compared to that of timpFL-LUC
(Fig. 5C). This decrease is most likely due to deletion of TER1 and not
to a disruption of the E box itself (see below). Removal of six
additional nucleotides up to the 5' border of the E box, timp681-LUC, causes a further decrease in
transcriptional activation, suggesting that some of these six upstream
nucleotides are also important for dCLK-mediated transcription (Fig.
5C). This construct still shows an eightfold level of activation.
Construct timp672-LUC, which completely removes
the E-box sequence, eliminates transcriptional activation by dCLK,
indicating that the E box itself is still functional in the absence of
any upstream tim sequence (Fig. 5C). Further truncations
have smaller effects, suggesting that most of the regulation goes
through the E box and TER1.
TER1 and PERR play major roles in tim transcription
in S2 cells.
Because results from deletions can be incomplete or
misleading, we eliminated these putative sequence elements primarily
with transversion mutations that did not create known transcription factor binding sites. Similar sequences were used in the mutagenesis of
each element in order to minimize artifacts. These mutated tim promoter constructs were cotransfected with dCLK into S2 cells.
Mutating the W-box element demonstrated that it plays little if any
role in tim transcription. However, transcriptional
activation decreased about eightfold with a mutation in either
TER1 or PERR (Fig. 5D). For TER1, the results correlate well with
the truncation of that region, which caused a 20-fold decrease (Fig.
5C, compare constructs timp701-LUC and
timp687-LUC). Mutating the TER2 element had
little or no effect on dCLK-mediated transcription (Fig. 5D). The
double mutant TER1/TER2 led to a further threefold decrease, indicating
that weak effects of TER2 may be masked by TER1 (Fig. 5D).
The PERR box plays a role in transcriptional activation of the
period promoter in S2 cells.
We also assayed the
role of the PERR box in transcriptional activation by substitutional
mutagenesis in the period promoter. The PERR box is upstream
of the E box in per and downstream of the E box in
tim but nearly the same distance from both E boxes (Fig. 5B
and 6A). We examined four constructs in
cotransfection assays with dCLK in S2 cells. A full-length construct,
perpFL, gives rise to a 5.8-fold activation when
cotransfected with dCLK (Fig. 6B). perpDEL,
created by deleting the region
137 bp to
32 bp in
perpFL, increased activation to 26-fold. A
similar deletion enhanced transcriptional activity from a
period-LacZ fusion protein in flies (18) and
presumably reflects the absence of an inhibitory sequence element.
Mutation of the PERR box in the context of
perpDEL decreased transcriptional activation
10-fold (Fig. 6B), similar to the approximately eightfold
decrease in reporter activity observed for the tim
promoter containing a mutated PERR box (Fig. 5D). Mutation of the
E box in perpDEL caused a nearly
identical 10-fold decrease in transcriptional activation of the
per promoter (Fig. 6B).

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 6.
Mutagenesis of the PERR box in the per
promoter in S2 cell assays. The role of the PERR box in the context of
the period promoter in the S2 cell transfection assay
was analyzed. (A) Sequence map of the per promoter.
Elements are outlined by boxes with names above the boxes. (B) Within
these constructs, the region between 137 and 32 (bounded by half
arrows) was deleted in the constructs indicated (denoted by the single
whole arrow). Mutant E boxes are crossed out and have the sequence
CTCGAG. The PERR box, E box, and W box are shown. Black bars
represent the induction of luciferase activity from
tim-luciferase transgenes in S2 cells cotransfected with
100 ng of pAC-dCLK.
|
|
In vivo promoter element analysis indicates that TER1 and TER2 play
a major role in tim transcription.
To assay the in
vivo role of the PERR and TER elements, we analyzed four
timpFL-LUC transgenic lines and TER1 (four
lines), PERR (three lines), TER1/PER (three lines), and TER1/TER2
(three lines) mutants. Figure 7 shows the
average luciferase activity for each genotype from a group of flies
within a representative line. In all luciferase recordings, there is a
second peak. This peak has been previously described by others
(4, 8, 48) and is a function of the assay conditions (8, 48).

View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 7.
In vivo functional analysis of tim
promoter elements. Flies contained tim
promoter-luciferase fusions. Each graph shows the
average luciferase activity (y axis) of flies
(n = 12) from a representative line for the
genotype indicated. All experiments were done under LD conditions (12 h
of light [white boxes]; 12 h of dark [black boxes]); zeitgeber
times are denoted on the x axis. Mutations in the
tim promoter are the same as those used in S2 cell
assays. (A) Line containing a normal 756-bp tim
promoter, designated timpFL-LUC. (B) Line containing a
mutagenized TER1 box. (C) Line containing a mutagenized PERR box. (D)
TER1/TER2 double mutant line. (E) TER1/PERR double mutant line.
|
|
In the timpFL-LUC lines, luciferase activity
cycles robustly with a periodicity of 24 h. The TER1 mutants
manifest about 50% of the total luciferase activity of
timpFL-LUC flies (Fig. 7A and B). In TER1/TER2
double mutants, luciferase activity is even lower, approximately 20 to
30% of that of timpFL-LUC flies (Fig. 7D). In
these strains, cycling is nearly abolished, indicating that TER2 makes
significant contributions to cycling and transcriptional activation in
the absence of TER1. The PERR mutant lines were almost
indistinguishable from timpFL-LUC flies (Fig.
7C). The TER1/PERR double mutants exhibit a slight reduction in
luciferase activity levels compared to those for TER1 mutants, but
cycling amplitude appears unaffected, suggesting that PERR functions
differently in the adult fly than in S2 cells (Fig. 7E; also see the
Discussion). The in vivo analysis validates the importance of the TER1
and TER2 boxes as well as the canonical E box in tim
transcriptional regulation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Noncanonical E-box-dependent transcription has been described
extensively for the Myc family of binding proteins, whose canonical high-affinity binding site has been determined as CACGTG by
sequential selection and amplification of binding sites (5, 6,
37). These studies led to the identification of lower-affinity,
noncanonical MYC-MAX binding sites, such as CATGTG,
CACGCG, CATGCG, CACGAC, and
CAACGTG. Grandori et al. (17) also found that
MYC-MAX dimers were able to bind a similar set of sequences in vivo, in
a tumorigenic cell line. A similar observation was recently reported
for mCLOCK/CYC (40). Four E boxes were identified in the
first and second introns of the mammalian dbp gene, whose
gene product is important in generating the cycling transcription of
several circadian genes in the liver (27). All four E
boxes were shown to activate a luciferase reporter in cell culture
assays upon transfection with mCLOCK and BMAL1, but only two of the
E-box regions showed circadian differences in DNase I-hypersensitive
sites: one with a canonical CACGTG motif and the other with
a noncanonical CACATG motif. Our study provides definitive
evidence that a noncanonical E box contributes to circadian
transcription in Drosophila.
We have also reaffirmed the idea that multiple E boxes contribute to
circadian transcription. Previously, the study of the mper1
promoter had demonstrated a role for multiple canonical E boxes
(16, 54). However, the tim promoter is unique,
as it possesses three functional E boxes within a short distance, about
150 bp. This combination of multiple elements likely allows important
protein-protein interactions, which contribute to the stronger
amplitude of tim than of per transcriptional
cycling (46). The observed direct correlation between
behavioral period length and tim mRNA levels suggests
that this more robust tim transcription amplitude is crucial
for proper 24-h behavioral rhythmicity. These interactions could also
accelerate the kinetics of transcription factors binding to the
tim promoter and be responsible for tim's
earlier peak of transcription (46). This also has important implications for the phase of PER accumulation, as TIM counteracts the effects of DBT on PER stability (V. Suri and M. Rosbash, unpublished results).
The TER boxes each have the identical sequence
GCGGCACGTTG. In S2 cells, the TER1 mutations,
CAAGTTG and
CTCGAAG, cause the same eightfold
deficit in transcription as does deletion of the entire sequence by
transversion mutations (data not shown), demonstrating the necessity of
an intact noncanonical E box for proper function. These data suggest
that TER1 and probably TER2 serve as additional binding sites for the
dCLK-CYC transcription factor complex. It has been shown previously
that the mammalian homolog of CYC (BMAL1 or MOP3) can bind multiple
members of the PAS domain family (21). Therefore,
dCLK or CYC could also dimerize with another partner to bind the TER1
element with high affinity. Alternatively or in addition, another
protein could bind to the 5' side of the TER motif (GCGG)
and stabilize the dCLK-CYC heterodimer on the 3' adjacent noncanonical
E box.
We also identified an E box in the first intron of the tim
gene. We were unable to detect any activity of this sequence in S2
cells, and a transgenic construct lacking the whole TER E-box region
but containing this intronic E box failed to generate detectable tim mRNA levels. This indicates that the intronic E box
is probably nonfunctional, for unknown reasons. Nevertheless, we still
cannot rule out the possibility that the TERs and the E box collaborate with other sequence elements. However, transgenic flies with only the
region of the tim promoter containing TER1 and the E box
fused to luciferase exhibited robust transcriptional cycling (data not shown). These two elements can therefore work independently of any
other tim promoter sequence. TER1 alone may even be able to drive transcriptional cycling, as a mutation in the E box did not
completely eliminate circadian oscillations of luciferase activity
(data not shown).
Do the two TERs have different functions? TER1 appears to be more
important than TER2. Both in vivo and in S2 cells, disrupting TER1
leads to strong effects on the transcriptional activity of the
tim promoter. In addition, examination of the TER1/TER2
double mutant suggests that TER2 is somewhat redundant in regard to
TER1. This could be due to a distance effect: TER1 is closer to the E
box, and factors bound to these motifs could be interacting more
strongly. Disruption of TER1 has a substantial effect on expression
levels (decrease of ~50%) but little or no effect on cycling
amplitude. In contrast, mutagenizing both TERs has a detrimental effect
on cycling amplitude as well as expression levels. We therefore propose
that both TERs are important determinants of tim mRNA levels and their oscillations and thus contribute to proper
rhythmicity. The observation that transgenic flies lacking an E box but
containing TER1 have less arrhythmicity than do flies without both
elements further supports this notion (Table 1).
We noticed another element conserved within the timeless and
period promoters. This PERR box has the sequence
GTTCGCACAA, which does not correspond to any known
transcription factor binding site described in the literature. Mutating
this element in the context of the tim promoter-S2 cell
assay led to decreases in transcription comparable to those caused by a
mutation in the TER1 box. Activation of the double TER1/PERR mutant was
equal to that of the TER1 and PERR single mutants, suggesting that
these two elements might collaborate to enhance tim
transcription in S2 cells. Importantly, mutation of the PERR box led to
a similar ~10-fold decrease in transcription in the context of the
period promoter.
These data strongly suggest that the PERR box plays a role in
per as well as tim transcription. However, PERR
box mutant flies have at most subtle differences in luciferase activity
compared to wild-type, timpFL-LUC flies. As S2
cells are derived from embryos, the PERR box might play a role during
development rather than in adult flies (Fig. 8). Alternatively, PERR could contribute
to tissue-specific transcriptional regulation of per and
tim (Fig. 8). If this element were active in only a small
subset of cells, it would explain why mutations have no observable
effect in the luciferase assays.

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 8.
Molecular model of per and
tim transcription. (A) It may be in vivo that the
majority of cells undergo a general process in which the TERs and E-box
elements serve as the primary loading sites for dCLK and CYC and the
PERR box plays a minor role in transcription. (B) If expression of the
protein or protein complex that binds the PERR box were tissue specific
or developmentally restricted, then that protein would interact with
the proteins binding to the TERs and the E box, probably dCLK
and CYC, and increase transcription of per and
tim.
|
|
Our study therefore shows the importance of tim regulation
for proper 24-h rhythmicity. Circadian period is very sensitive to
tim mRNA levels, with more tim mRNA
generating periods closer to 24 h. per mRNA cycling
follows the same trend, as per mRNA trough levels are
progressively lowered with increasing tim mRNA. Near-wild-type TIM levels are therefore required for accurate negative
feedback on PER transcription. Lower TIM levels probably delay PER
stabilization and nuclear entry and therefore lengthen the period.
However, the amount of tim mRNA required for rhythmicity is rather low, and the levels generated by the minimal promoter are
probably very close to this threshold. It is somewhat surprising that
these periods are not longer than ~29 to 30 h, suggesting that
tim levels can affect period only within a narrow range. tim missense mutations can have a much larger effect on
period (40a). In the timpMIN line,
it is also surprising that PER is not cycling under LD, whereas it
cycles in DD. Perhaps TIM levels fall just below threshold in LD,
because TIM is degraded by light. PER cycling in
timpMIN.1 would therefore be due to the increased
amount of TIM in DD (data not shown), which is sufficient to generate
PER stabilization and accumulation and yield a quasinormal cycling profile.
It will be of considerable interest to monitor precisely the kinetics
of PER and TIM nuclear entry in lines with very limited amounts of TIM,
both in peripheral oscillators and in the circadian pacemaker cells
(the ventral lateral neurons). This could solidify the relationship
between PER and TIM relocalization on the one hand and period length on
the other. It will also be important to verify that expression levels
and cycling of PER and TIM in the lateral neurons, the cells
responsible for behavioral rhythmicity, parallel what is observed in
the biochemical assays.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Ravi Allada for providing critical comments on the
manuscript. We also thank Ed Dougherty for help with figures, Heather
Felton for administrative assistance, and members of the Rosbash lab
for stimulating discussions.
P.E. was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation
(fellowships 81GE-048176 and 823A050335). This work was also supported by NIH grant POI GM 33205.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biology, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, Waltham, MA 02454. Phone: (781) 736-3160. Fax: (781) 736-3164. E-mail:
rosbash{at}brandeis.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
| 1.
|
Allada, R.,
N. E. White,
W. V. So,
J. C. Hall, and M. Rosbash.
1998.
A mutant Drosophila homolog of mammalian Clock disrupts circadian rhythms and transcription of period and timeless.
Cell
93:791-804[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 2.
|
Bae, K.,
C. Lee,
P. E. Hardin, and I. Edery.
2000.
dCLOCK is present in limiting amounts and likely mediates daily interactions between the dCLOCK-CYC transcription factor and the PER-TIM complex.
J. Neurosci.
20:1746-1753[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 3.
|
Bae, K.,
C. Lee,
D. Sidote,
K. Y. Chuang, and I. Edery.
1998.
Circadian regulation of a Drosophila homolog of the mammalian Clock gene: PER and TIM function as positive regulators.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
18:6142-6151[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 4.
|
Belvin, M. P.,
H. Zhou, and J. C. Yin.
1999.
The Drosophila dCREB2 gene affects the circadian clock.
Neuron
22:777-787[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 5.
|
Blackwell, T. K.,
J. Huang,
A. Ma,
L. Kretzner,
F. W. Alt,
R. N. Eisenman, and H. Weintraub.
1993.
Binding of Myc proteins to canonical and noncanonical DNA sequences.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
13:5216-5224[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 6.
|
Blackwell, T. K.,
L. Kretzner,
E. M. Blackwood,
R. N. Eisenman, and H. Weintraub.
1990.
Sequence-specific DNA binding by the c-Myc protein.
Science
250:1149-1151[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 7.
|
Blau, J., and M. W. Young.
1999.
Cycling vrille expression is required for a functional Drosophila clock.
Cell
99:661-671[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 8.
|
Brandes, C.,
J. D. Plautz,
R. Stanewsky,
C. F. Jamison,
M. Straume,
K. V. Wood,
S. A. Kay, and J. C. Hall.
1996.
Novel features of Drosophila period transcription revealed by real-time luciferase reporting.
Neuron
16:687-692[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 9.
|
Darlington, T. K.,
K. Wager-Smith,
M. F. Ceriani,
D. Staknis,
N. Gekakis,
T. D. L. Steeves,
C. J. Weitz,
J. S. Takahashi, and S. A. Kay.
1998.
Closing the circadian loop: CLOCK-induced transcription of its own inhibitors per and tim.
Science
280:1599-1603[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 10.
|
Dunlap, J. C.
1999.
Molecular bases for circadian clocks.
Cell
96:271-290[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 11.
|
Edery, I.
1999.
Role of post-transcriptional regulation in circadian clocks: lessons from Drosophila.
Chronobiol. Int.
16:377-414[Medline].
|
| 12.
|
Edery, I.,
L. J. Zwiebel,
M. E. Dembinska, and M. Rosbash.
1994.
Temporal phosphorylation of the Drosophila period protein.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
91:2260-2264[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 13.
|
Emery, P.,
W. V. So,
M. Kaneko,
J. C. Hall, and M. Rosbash.
1998.
CRY, a Drosophila clock and light-regulated cryptochrome, is a major contributor to circadian rhythm resetting and photosensitivity.
Cell
95:669-679[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 14.
|
Ewer, J.,
B. Frisch,
M. J. Hamblen-Coyle,
M. Rosbash, and J. C. Hall.
1992.
Expression of the period clock gene within different cell types in the brain of Drosophila adults and mosaic analysis of these cells' influence on circadian behavioral rhythms.
J. Neurosci.
12:3321-3349[Abstract].
|
| 15.
|
Frisch, B.,
P. E. Hardin,
M. J. Hamblen-Coyle,
M. Rosbash, and J. C. Hall.
1994.
A promoterless DNA fragment from the period locus rescues behavioral rhythmicity and mediates cyclical gene expression in a restricted subset of the Drosophila nervous system.
Neuron
12:555-570[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 16.
|
Gekakis, N.,
D. Staknis,
H. B. Nguyen,
C. F. Davis,
L. D. Wilsbacher,
D. P. King,
J. S. Takahashi, and C. J. Weitz.
1998.
Role of the CLOCK protein in the mammalian circadian mechanism.
Science
280:1564-1569[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 16a.
|
Glossop, N. R.,
L. C. Lyons, and P. E. Hardin.
1999.
Interlocked feedback loops within the Drosophila circadian pacemaker.
Science
286:766-768[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 17.
|
Grandori, C.,
J. Mac,
F. Siebelt,
D. E. Ayer, and R. N. Eisenman.
1996.
Myc-Max heterodimers activate a DEAD box gene and interact with multiple E box-related sites in vivo.
EMBO J.
15:4344-4357[Medline].
|
| 18.
|
Hao, H.,
D. L. Allen, and P. E. Hardin.
1997.
A circadian enhancer mediates PER-dependent mRNA cycling in Drosophila melanogaster.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
17:3687-3693[Abstract].
|
| 19.
|
Hardin, P. E.,
J. C. Hall, and M. Rosbash.
1990.
Feedback of the Drosophila period gene product on circadian cycling of its messenger RNA levels.
Nature
343:536-540[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 20.
|
Hardin, P. E.,
J. C. Hall, and M. Rosbash.
1992.
Circadian oscillations in period gene mRNA levels are transcriptionally regulated.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
89:11711-11715[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 21.
|
Hogenesch, J. B.,
Y.-Z. Gu,
S. Jain, and C. A. Bradfield.
1998.
The basic-helix-loop-helix-PAS orphan MOP3 forms transcriptionally active complexes with circadian and hypoxia factors.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
95:5474-5479[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 22.
|
Hunter-Ensor, M.,
A. Ousley, and A. Sehgal.
1996.
Regulation of the Drosophila protein timeless suggests a mechanism for resetting the circadian clock by light.
Cell
84:677-685[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 23.
|
Jin, X.,
L. P. Shearman,
D. R. Weaver,
M. J. Zylka,
G. J. de Vries, and S. M. Reppert.
1999.
A molecular mechanism regulating rhythmic output from the suprachiasmatic circadian clock.
Cell
96:57-68[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 24.
|
King, D. P.,
Y. Zhao,
A. M. Sangoram,
L. D. Wilsbacher,
M. Tanaka,
M. P. Antoch,
T. D. L. Steeves,
M. H. Vitaterna,
J. M. Kornhauser,
P. L. Lowrey,
F. W. Turek, and J. S. Takahashi.
1997.
Positional cloning of the mouse circadian clock gene.
Cell
89:641-653[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 25.
|
Kloss, B.,
J. L. Price,
L. Saez,
J. Blau,
A. Rothenfluh-Hilfiker,
C. S. Wesley, and M. W. Young.
1998.
The Drosophila clock gene double-time encodes a protein closely related to human casein kinase I.
Cell
94:97-107[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 26.
|
Kume, K.,
M. J. Zylka,
S. Sriram,
L. P. Shearman,
D. R. Weaver,
X. Jin,
E. S. Maywood,
M. H. Hastings, and S. M. Reppert.
1999.
mCRY1 and mCRY2 are essential components of the negative limb of the circadian clock feedback loop.
Cell
98:193-205[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 27.
|
Lavery, D. J.,
L. Lopez-Molina,
R. Margueron,
F. Fleury-Olela,
F. Conquet,
U. Schibler, and C. Bonfils.
1999.
Circadian expression of the steroid 15 -hydroxylase (Cyp2a4) and coumarin 7-hydroxylase (Cyp2a5) genes in mouse liver is regulated by the PAR leucine zipper transcription factor DBP.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
19:6488-6499[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 28.
|
Lee, C.,
K. Bae, and I. Edery.
1998.
The Drosophila CLOCK protein undergoes daily rhythms in abundance, phosphorylation and interactions with the PER-TIM complex.
Neuron
4:857-867.
|
| 29.
|
Lee, C.,
K. Bae, and I. Edery.
1999.
PER and TIM inhibit the DNA binding activity of a Drosophila CLOCK-CYC/dBMAL1 heterodimer without disrupting formation of the heterodimer: a basis for circadian transcription.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
19:5316-5325[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 30.
|
Lee, C.,
V. Parikh,
T. Itsukaichi,
K. Bae, and I. Edery.
1996.
Resetting the Drosophila clock by photic regulation of PER and a PER-TIM complex.
Science
271:1740-1744[Abstract].
|
| 31.
|
Lowrey, P. L.,
K. Shimomura,
M. P. Antoch,
S. Yamazaki,
P. D. Zemenides,
M. R. Ralph,
M. Menaker, and J. S. Takahashi.
2000.
Positional syntenic cloning and functional characterization of the mammalian circadian mutation tau.
Science
288:483-492[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 32.
|
Luehrsen, K. R.,
J. R. de Wet, and V. Walbot.
1992.
Transient expression analysis in plants using firefly luciferase reporter gene.
Methods Enzymol.
216:397-414[Medline].
|
| 33.
|
Marrus, S. B.,
H. Zeng, and M. Rosbash.
1996.
Effect of constant light and circadian entrainment of pers flies: evidence for light-mediated delay of the negative feedback loop in Drosophila.
EMBO J.
15:6877-6886[Medline].
|
| 34.
|
Myers, M. P.,
K. Wager-Smith,
A. Rothenfluh-Hilfiker, and M. W. Young.
1996.
Light-induced degradation of TIMELESS and entrainment of the Drosophila circadian clock.
Science
271:1736-1740[Abstract].
|
| 35.
|
Okamura, H.,
S. Miyake,
Y. Sumi,
S. Yamaguchi,
A. Yasui,
M. Muijtjens,
J. H. Hoeijmakers, and G. T. van der Horst.
1999.
Photic induction of mPer1 and mPer2 in cry-deficient mice lacking a biological clock.
Science
286:2531-2534[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 36.
|
Plautz, J. D.,
M. Kaneko,
J. C. Hall, and S. A. Kay.
1997.
Independent photoreceptive circadian clocks throughout Drosophila.
Science
278:1632-1635[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 37.
|
Prendergast, G. C., and E. B. Ziff.
1989.
DNA-binding motif.
Nature
341:392[Medline].
|
| 38.
|
Price, J. L.,
J. Blau,
A. Rothenfluh-Hilfiker,
M. Abodeely,
B. Kloss, and M. W. Young.
1998.
double-time is a novel Drosophila clock gene that regulates PERIOD protein accumulation.
Cell
94:83-95[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 39.
|
Price, J. L.,
M. E. Dembinska,
M. W. Young, and M. Rosbash.
1995.
Suppression of PERIOD protein abundance and circadian cycling by the Drosophila clock mutation timeless.
EMBO J.
14:4044-4049[Medline].
|
| 40.
|
Ripperger, J. A.,
L. P. Shearman,
S. M. Reppert, and U. Schibler.
2000.
CLOCK, an essential pacemaker component, controls expression of the circadian transcription factor DBP.
Genes Dev.
14:679-689[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 40a.
|
Rothenfluh, A.,
M. W. Young, and L. Saez.
2000.
A TIMELESS-independent function for PERIOD proteins in the Drosophila clock.
Neuron
26:505-514[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 41.
|
Rutila, J. E.,
O. Maltseva, and M. Rosbash.
1998.
The timSL mutant affects a restricted portion of the Drosophila melanogaster circadian cycle.
J. Biol. Rhythms
13:380-392[Abstract].
|
| 42.
|
Rutila, J. E.,
V. Suri,
M. Le,
W. V. So,
M. Rosbash, and J. C. Hall.
1998.
CYCLE is a second bHLH-PAS protein essential for circadian transcription of Drosophila period and timeless.
Cell
93:805-814[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 43.
|
Saez, L., and M. W. Young.
1996.
Regulation of nuclear entry of the Drosophila clock proteins PERIOD and TIMELESS.
Neuron
17:911-920[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 44.
|
Scully, A. L., and S. A. Kay.
2000.
Time flies for Drosophila.
Cell
100:297-300[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 45.
|
Sehgal, A.,
A. Rothenfluh-Hilfiker,
M. Hunter-Ensor,
Y. Chen,
M. Myers, and M. W. Young.
1995.
Circadian oscillations and autoregulation of timeless RNA.
Science
270:808-810[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 46.
|
So, W. V., and M. Rosbash.
1997.
Post-transcriptional regulation contributes to Drosophila clock gene mRNA cycling.
EMBO J.
16:7146-7155[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 47.
|
So, W. V.,
L. Sarov-Blat,
C. Kotarski,
M. J. McDonald, and M. Rosbash.
2000.
takeout: a clock-regulated gene and the transcriptional regulation for novel cycling phase.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
20:6935-6944[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 48.
|
Stanewsky, R.,
C. F. Jamison,
J. D. Plautz,
S. A. Kay, and J. C. Hall.
1997.
Multiple circadian-regulated elements contribute to cycling period gene expression in Drosophila.
EMBO J.
16:5006-5018[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 49.
|
Suri, V.,
A. Lanjuin, and M. Rosbash.
1999.
TIMELESS-dependent positive and negative autoregulation in the Drosophila circadian clock.
EMBO J.
18:675-686[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 50.
|
Suri, V.,
Z. Qian,
J. C. Hall, and M. Rosbash.
1998.
Evidence that the TIM light response is relevant to light-induced phase shifts in Drosophila melanogaster.
Neuron
21:225-234[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 51.
|
Taruscio, D.,
G. K. Zoraqi,
M. Falchi,
F. Iosi,
S. Paradisi,
B. Di Fiore,
P. Lavia, and V. Falbo.
2000.
The human per1 gene: genomic organization and promoter analysis of the first human orthologue of the Drosophila period gene.
Gene
253:161-170[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 52.
|
Thummel, C. S.,
A. M. Boulet, and H. D. Lipshitz.
1988.
Vectors for Drosophila P-element-mediated transformation and tissue culture transfection.
Gene
74:445-456[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 53.
|
Vosshall, L. B.,
J. L. Price,
A. Sehgal,
L. Saez, and M. W. Young.
1994.
Specific block in nuclear localization of period protein by a second clock mutation, timeless.
Science
263:1606-1609[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 54.
|
Yamaguchi, S.,
S. Mitsui,
S. Miyake,
L. Yan,
H. Onishi,
K. Yagita,
M. Suzuki,
S. Shibata,
M. Kobayashi, and H. Okamura.
2000.
The 5' upstream region of mPer1 gene contains two promoters and is responsible for circadian oscillation.
Curr. Biol.
10:873-876[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 55.
|
Yang, Z.,
M. Emerson,
H. S. Su, and A. Sehgal.
1998.
Response of the timeless protein to light correlates with behavioral entrainment and suggests a nonvisual pathway for circadian photoreception.
Neuron
21:215-223[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 56.
|
Zeng, H.,
Z. Qian,
M. P. Myers, and M. Rosbash.
1996.
A light-entrainment mechanism for the Drosophila circadian clock.
Nature
380:129-135[CrossRef][Medline].
|
Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2001, p. 1207-1217, Vol. 21, No. 4
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.4.1207-1217.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Taylor, P., Hardin, P. E.
(2008). Rhythmic E-Box Binding by CLK-CYC Controls Daily Cycles in per and tim Transcription and Chromatin Modifications. Mol. Cell. Biol.
28: 4642-4652
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Matsumoto, A., Ukai-Tadenuma, M., Yamada, R. G., Houl, J., Uno, K. D., Kasukawa, T., Dauwalder, B., Itoh, T. Q., Takahashi, K., Ueda, R., Hardin, P. E., Tanimura, T., Ueda, H. R.
(2007). A functional genomics strategy reveals clockwork orange as a transcriptional regulator in the Drosophila circadian clock. Genes Dev.
21: 1687-1700
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kadener, S., Stoleru, D., McDonald, M., Nawathean, P., Rosbash, M.
(2007). Clockwork Orange is a transcriptional repressor and a new Drosophila circadian pacemaker component. Genes Dev.
21: 1675-1686
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Bayele, H. K., McArdle, H., Srai, S. K.S.
(2006). Cis and trans regulation of hepcidin expression by upstream stimulatory factor. Blood
108: 4237-4245
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chen, W.-F., Majercak, J., Edery, I.
(2006). Clock-gated photic stimulation of timeless expression at cold temperatures and seasonal adaptation in Drosophila.. J Biol Rhythms
21: 256-271
[Abstract]
-
Yu, W., Zheng, H., Houl, J. H., Dauwalder, B., Hardin, P. E.
(2006). PER-dependent rhythms in CLK phosphorylation and E-box binding regulate circadian transcription.. Genes Dev.
20: 723-733
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wagner, A.
(2005). Circuit topology and the evolution of robustness in two-gene circadian oscillators. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
102: 11775-11780
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Leclerc, G. M., Boockfor, F. R.
(2005). Pulses of Prolactin Promoter Activity Depend on a Noncanonical E-Box that Can Bind the Circadian Proteins CLOCK and BMAL1. Endocrinology
146: 2782-2790
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Hardin, P. E.
(2004). Transcription Regulation within the Circadian Clock: The E-box and Beyond. J Biol Rhythms
19: 348-360
[Abstract]
-
Vallone, D., Gondi, S. B., Whitmore, D., Foulkes, N. S.
(2004). E-box function in a period gene repressed by light. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
101: 4106-4111
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Forger, D. B., Peskin, C. S.
(2003). A detailed predictive model of the mammalian circadian clock. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
100: 14806-14811
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Froehlich, A. C., Loros, J. J., Dunlap, J. C.
(2003). Rhythmic binding of a WHITE COLLAR-containing complex to the frequency promoter is inhibited by FREQUENCY. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
100: 5914-5919
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Michael, T. P., McClung, C. R.
(2002). Phase-Specific Circadian Clock Regulatory Elements in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol.
130: 627-638
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Munoz, E., Brewer, M., Baler, R.
(2002). Circadian Transcription. THINKING OUTSIDE THE E-BOX. J. Biol. Chem.
277: 36009-36017
[Abstract]
[Full Text]