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    Date Issued2008 (1)2007 (1)2004 (1)AuthorEmery, Patrick (3)
    Emery-Le, Myai (3)
    Busza, Ania (1)Casselman, Amy L. (1)Murad, Alejandro D. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationEmery Lab (3)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Neuroscience Program (3)Neurobiology (3)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, MD/PhD Program (1)Reppert Lab (1)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordNeuroscience and Neurobiology (3)*Circadian Rhythm (1)*Light (1)Animals (1)Animals, Genetically Modified (1)View MoreJournalNeuron (1)PLoS biology (1)Science (New York, N.Y.) (1)

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    Cryptochromes define a novel circadian clock mechanism in monarch butterflies that may underlie sun compass navigation

    Zhu, Haisun; Sauman, Ivo; Yuan, Quan; Casselman, Amy L.; Emery-Le, Myai; Emery, Patrick; Reppert, Steven M. (2008-01-11)
    The circadian clock plays a vital role in monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) migration by providing the timing component of time-compensated sun compass orientation, a process that is important for successful navigation. We therefore evaluated the monarch clockwork by focusing on the functions of a Drosophila-like cryptochrome (cry), designated cry1, and a vertebrate-like cry, designated cry2, that are both expressed in the butterfly and by placing these genes in the context of other relevant clock genes in vivo. We found that similar temporal patterns of clock gene expression and protein levels occur in the heads, as occur in DpN1 cells, of a monarch cell line that contains a light-driven clock. CRY1 mediates TIMELESS degradation by light in DpN1 cells, and a light-induced TIMELESS decrease occurs in putative clock cells in the pars lateralis (PL) in the brain. Moreover, monarch cry1 transgenes partially rescue both biochemical and behavioral light-input defects in cry(b) mutant Drosophila. CRY2 is the major transcriptional repressor of CLOCK:CYCLE-mediated transcription in DpN1 cells, and endogenous CRY2 potently inhibits transcription without involvement of PERIOD. CRY2 is co-localized with clock proteins in the PL, and there it translocates to the nucleus at the appropriate time for transcriptional repression. We also discovered CRY2-positive neural projections that oscillate in the central complex. The results define a novel, CRY-centric clock mechanism in the monarch in which CRY1 likely functions as a blue-light photoreceptor for entrainment, whereas CRY2 functions within the clockwork as the transcriptional repressor of a negative transcriptional feedback loop. Our data further suggest that CRY2 may have a dual role in the monarch butterfly's brain-as a core clock element and as an output that regulates circadian activity in the central complex, the likely site of the sun compass.
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    A subset of dorsal neurons modulates circadian behavior and light responses in Drosophila

    Murad, Alejandro D.; Emery-Le, Myai; Emery, Patrick (2007-03-03)
    A fundamental property of circadian rhythms is their ability to persist under constant conditions. In Drosophila, the ventral Lateral Neurons (LNvs) are the pacemaker neurons driving circadian behavior under constant darkness. Wild-type flies are arrhythmic under constant illumination, but flies defective for the circadian photoreceptor CRY remain rhythmic. We found that flies overexpressing the pacemaker gene per or the morgue gene are also behaviorally rhythmic under constant light. Unexpectedly, the LNvs do not drive these rhythms: they are molecularly arrhythmic, and PDF--the neuropeptide they secrete to synchronize behavioral rhythms under constant darkness--is dispensable for rhythmicity in constant light. Molecular circadian rhythms are only found in a group of Dorsal Neurons: the DN1s. Thus, a subset of Dorsal Neurons shares with the LNvs the ability to function as pacemakers for circadian behavior, and its importance is promoted by light.
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    Roles of the two Drosophila CRYPTOCHROME structural domains in circadian photoreception

    Busza, Ania; Emery-Le, Myai; Rosbash, Michael; Emery, Patrick (2004-06-05)
    CRYPTOCHROME (CRY) is the primary circadian photoreceptor in Drosophila. We show that CRY binding to TIMELESS (TIM) is light-dependent in flies and irreversibly commits TIM to proteasomal degradation. In contrast, CRY degradation is dependent on continuous light exposure, indicating that the CRY-TIM interaction is transient. A novel cry mutation (cry(m)) reveals that CRY's photolyase homology domain is sufficient for light detection and phototransduction, whereas the carboxyl-terminal domain regulates CRY stability, CRY-TIM interaction, and circadian photosensitivity. This contrasts with the function of Arabidopsis CRY domains and demonstrates that insect and plant cryptochromes use different mechanisms.
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