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    Date Issued2007 (1)2005 (2)Author
    Briscoe, Adriana D. (3)
    Reppert, Steven M. (3)Yuan, Quan (3)Casselman, Amy L. (2)Froy, Oren (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationGraduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Neuroscience Program (3)Neurobiology (3)Reppert Lab (3)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordNeuroscience and Neurobiology (3)Animal Migration; Animals; Brain; Butterflies; CLOCK Proteins; Circadian Rhythm; Gene Expression; Immunohistochemistry; In Situ Hybridization; Neural Pathways; Photoreceptor Cells, Invertebrate; Phylogeny; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Retina; Rod Opsins; Sunlight; Trans-Activators; Ultraviolet Rays (1)Animals; Bees; Beetles; Biological Clocks; Blotting, Western; Cells, Cultured; Circadian Rhythm; Evolution, Molecular; Flavoproteins; Gene Deletion; Gene Duplication; Insect Proteins; Insects; Models, Biological; Phylogeny; Transcription, Genetic (1)Animals; Biological Clocks; Butterflies; Cell Line; Cryptochromes; DNA, Complementary; Drosophila; Expressed Sequence Tags; Flavoproteins; Gene Expression Regulation; *Light; Luciferases; *Phylogeny (1)View MoreJournalCurrent biology : CB (1)Molecular biology and evolution (1)Neuron (1)

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    Insect cryptochromes: gene duplication and loss define diverse ways to construct insect circadian clocks

    Yuan, Quan; Metterville, Danielle; Briscoe, Adriana D.; Reppert, Steven M. (2007-04-25)
    Cryptochrome (CRY) proteins are components of the central circadian clockwork of metazoans. Phylogenetic analyses show at least 2 rounds of gene duplication at the base of the metazoan radiation, as well as several losses, gave rise to 2 cryptochrome (cry) gene families in insects, a Drosophila-like cry1 gene family and a vertebrate-like cry2 family. Previous studies have shown that insect CRY1 is photosensitive, whereas photo-insensitive CRY2 functions to potently inhibit clock-relevant CLOCK:CYCLE-mediated transcription. Here, we extended the transcriptional repressive function of insect CRY2 to 2 orders--Hymenoptera (the honeybee Apis mellifera and the bumblebee Bombus impatiens) and Coleoptera (the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum). Importantly, the bee and beetle CRY2 proteins are not light sensitive in culture, in either degradation of protein levels or inhibitory transcriptional response, suggesting novel light input pathways into their circadian clocks as Apis and Tribolium do not have CRY1. By mapping the functional data onto a cryptochrome/6-4 photolyase gene tree, we find that the transcriptional repressive function of insect CRY2 descended from a light-sensitive photolyase-like ancestral gene, probably lacking the ability to repress CLOCK:CYCLE-mediated transcription. These data provide an evolutionary context for proposing novel circadian clock mechanisms in insects.
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    The two CRYs of the butterfly

    Zhu, Haisun; Yuan, Quan; Briscoe, Adriana D.; Froy, Oren; Casselman, Amy L.; Reppert, Steven M. (2005-12-08)
    Animal flavoproteins called cryptochromes (CRYs) are generally believed to have distinct circadian clock functions in insects and mammals. We have discovered that the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, has two cry genes: one encodes a fly-like protein with photosensitive properties, while the other encodes a mouse-like protein with potent transcriptional repressive activity. Database searches show that other non-drosophilid insects also have two cry genes. These findings change our view of how some insect clocks may work and redefine the evolution of animal CRYs.
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    Connecting the navigational clock to sun compass input in monarch butterfly brain

    Sauman, Ivo; Briscoe, Adriana D.; Zhu, Haisun; Shi, Dingding; Froy, Oren; Stalleicken, Julia; Yuan, Quan; Casselman, Amy L.; Reppert, Steven M. (2005-05-11)
    Migratory monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) use a time-compensated sun compass to navigate to their overwintering grounds in Mexico. Although polarized light is one of the celestial cues used for orientation, the spectral content (color) of that light has not been fully explored. We cloned the cDNAs of three visual pigment-encoding opsins (ultraviolet [UV], blue, and long wavelength) and found that all three are expressed uniformly in main retina. The photoreceptors of the polarization-specialized dorsal rim area, on the other hand, are monochromatic for the UV opsin. Behavioral studies support the importance of polarized UV light for flight orientation. Next, we used clock protein expression patterns to identify the location of a circadian clock in the dorsolateral protocerebrum of butterfly brain. To provide a link between the clock and the sun compass, we identified a CRYPTOCHROME-staining neural pathway that likely connects the circadian clock to polarized light input entering brain.
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