Transcriptional regulation of the mouse EphA4 , Ephrin-B2 and Ephrin-A3 genes by the circadian clock machinery.
Maria Neus Ballester RoigPierre-Gabriel RoyLydia HannouBenoît Delignat-LavaudThomas-Andrew Sully GuerrierErika Bélanger-NelsonJulien Dufort-GervaisValérie MongrainPublished in: Chronobiology international (2023)
Circadian rhythms originate from molecular feedback loops. In mammals, the transcription factors CLOCK and BMAL1 act on regulatory elements (i.e. E-boxes) to shape biological functions in a rhythmic manner. The EPHA4 receptor and its ligands Ephrins (EFN) are cell adhesion molecules regulating neurotransmission and neuronal morphology. Previous studies showed the presence of E-boxes in the genes of EphA4 and specific Ephrins, and that EphA4 knockout mice have an altered circadian rhythm of locomotor activity. We thus hypothesized that the core clock machinery regulates the gene expression of EphA4 , EfnB2 and EfnA3 . CLOCK and BMAL1 (or NPAS2 and BMAL2) were found to have transcriptional activity on distal and proximal regions of EphA4 , EfnB2 and EfnA3 putative promoters. A constitutively active form of glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β; a negative regulator of CLOCK and BMAL1) blocked the transcriptional induction. Mutating the E-boxes of EphA4 distal promoter sequence reduced transcriptional induction. EPHA4 and EFNB2 protein levels did not show circadian variations in the mouse suprachiasmatic nucleus or prefrontal cortex. The findings uncover that core circadian transcription factors can regulate the gene expression of elements of the Eph/Ephrin system, which might contribute to circadian rhythmicity in biological processes in the brain or peripheral tissues.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- genome wide identification
- prefrontal cortex
- genome wide
- cell adhesion
- dna binding
- blood pressure
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- heart rate
- amino acid
- tyrosine kinase
- small molecule
- functional connectivity
- heat shock
- resting state
- binding protein
- subarachnoid hemorrhage