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Synaptic BMAL1 phosphorylation controls circadian hippocampal plasticity.

Ilaria BaroneNicole M GiletteHannah Hawks-MayerJonathan HandyKevin J ZhangFortunate F ChifambaEngie MostafaErin M Johnson-VenkateshYan SunJennifer M GibsonAlexander RotenbergHisashi UmemoriPeter T TsaiJonathan O Lipton
Published in: Science advances (2023)
The time of day strongly influences adaptive behaviors like long-term memory, but the correlating synaptic and molecular mechanisms remain unclear. The circadian clock comprises a canonical transcription-translation feedback loop (TTFL) strictly dependent on the BMAL1 transcription factor. We report that BMAL1 rhythmically localizes to hippocampal synapses in a manner dependent on its phosphorylation at Ser 42 [pBMAL1(S42)]. pBMAL1(S42) regulates the autophosphorylation of synaptic CaMKIIα and circadian rhythms of CaMKIIα-dependent molecular interactions and LTP but not global rest/activity behavior. Therefore, our results suggest a model in which repurposing of the clock protein BMAL1 to synapses locally gates the circadian timing of plasticity.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • prefrontal cortex
  • working memory
  • cerebral ischemia
  • dna binding
  • protein protein
  • blood brain barrier
  • drug discovery