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Background

Cell proliferation in all rapidly renewing mammalian tissues follows a circadian rhythm that is often disrupted in advanced-stage tumors. Epidemiologic studies have revealed a clear link between disruption of circadian rhythms and cancer development in humans. Mice lacking the circadian genes Period1 and 2 (Per) or Cryptochrome1 and 2 (Cry) are deficient in cell cycle regulation and Per2 mutant mice are cancer-prone. However, it remains unclear how circadian rhythm in cell proliferation is generated in vivo and why disruption of circadian rhythm may lead to tumorigenesis.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Mice lacking Per1 and 2, Cry1 and 2, or one copy of Bmal1, all show increased spontaneous and radiation-induced tumor development. The neoplastic growth of Per-mutant somatic cells is not controlled cell-autonomously but is dependent upon extracellular mitogenic signals. Among the circadian output pathways, the rhythmic sympathetic signaling plays a key role in the central-peripheral timing mechanism that simultaneously activates the cell cycle clock via AP1-controlled Myc induction and p53 via peripheral clock-controlled ATM activation. Jet-lag promptly desynchronizes the central clock-SNS-peripheral clock axis, abolishes the peripheral clock-dependent ATM activation, and activates myc oncogenic potential, leading to tumor development in the same organ systems in wild-type and circadian gene-mutant mice.

Conclusions/Significance

Tumor suppression in vivo is a clock-controlled physiological function. The central circadian clock paces extracellular mitogenic signals that drive peripheral clock-controlled expression of key cell cycle and tumor suppressor genes to generate a circadian rhythm in cell proliferation. Frequent disruption of circadian rhythm is an important tumor promoting factor.  相似文献   

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ABSTRACT

In Cushing’s syndrome, the cortisol rhythm is impaired and can be associated with the disruption in the rhythmic expression of clock genes. In this study, we evaluated the expression of CLOCK, BMAL1, CRY1, CRY2, PER1, PER2, PER3 genes in peripheral blood leukocytes of healthy individuals (n = 13) and Cushing’s disease (CD) patients (n = 12). Participants underwent salivary cortisol measurement at 0900 h and 2300 h. Peripheral blood samples were obtained at 0900 h, 1300 h, 1700 h, and 2300 h for assessing clock gene expression by qPCR. Gene expression circadian variations were evaluated by the Cosinor method. In healthy controls, a circadian variation in the expression of CLOCK, BMAL1, CRY1, PER2, and PER3 was observed, whereas the expression of PER1 and CRY2 followed no specific pattern. The expression of PER2 and PER3 in healthy leukocytes presented a late afternoon acrophase, similarly to CLOCK, whereas CRY1 showed night acrophase, similarly to BMAL1. In CD patients, the circadian variation in the expression of clock genes was lost, along with the abolition of cortisol circadian rhythm. However, CRY2 exhibited a circadian variation with acrophase during the dark phase in patients. In conclusion, our data suggest that Cushing’s disease, which is characterized by hypercortisolism, is associated with abnormalities in the circadian pattern of clock genes. Higher expression of CRY2 at night outlines its putative role in the cortisol circadian rhythm disruption.  相似文献   

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