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Genetics, Vol. 178, 1-13, January 2008, Copyright © 2008
doi:10.1534/genetics.104.86496
Salad Days in the Rhythms Trade
Jay C. Dunlap1
Department of Genetics, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
1 Address for correspondence: Department of Genetics, 701 Remsen Bldg. HB7400, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 30755.
E-mail: jay.c.dunlap{at}dartmouth.edu
Anecdotal, Historical and Critical Commentaries on Genetics
Edited by James F. Crow and William F. Dove
ONE of the nicest things anyone ever said about our work was in a (necessarily) anonymous grant review from the early 1990s in which the author commented that our lab had contributed greatly to moving the study of circadian rhythms "out of the era of spoon-bending." Some years later Bob Metzenberg, who always cherished a well-turned phrase, fessed up to having written this, and it is easy to see his quick wit and word play. I mention it here because it nicely encapsulates the 25 years that I want to cover, a period that extends from the era when belief in intracellular circadian rhythms stretched the credibility of all but devotees to the years when the problem was cracked and rhythms truly entered mainstream science (SCIENCE NEWS and EDITORIAL STAFFS 1997, 1998). During this time, analysis of rhythms moved from the use of genetics—which opened up the black box and exposed the feedback loops—to molecular biology, where the field is now. Although it is tempting to write about all the vistas that opened up during this time based on work in Neurospora, from clock mechanism to clock output, I have restricted this Perspectives to studies on the circadian mechanism and will leave output to other, highly capable hands (LOROS 2008). It is an account of what drew me to rhythms work and to the Neurospora circadian system and of what led our lab to identify the factors and interactions that contributed to the denouement of the question of the molecular bases of circadian rhythms: the assembly, a little over a decade ago, of a complete interconnected regulatory cycle.
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Meanwhile, physiological approaches using metabolic inhibitors, an approach pioneered by J. W. ("Woody") Hastings and colleagues (HASTINGS 1960), sought to define the aspects of cellular metabolism required for rhythmicity as well as to pioneer the approach of following the regulatory trail of circadian outputs back to the mechanism. Harvard in the mid-1970s was a great place and time to learn biochemistry and I did so, determining the structure of Gonyaulax luciferin (DUNLAP and HASTINGS 1981a; DUNLAP et al. 1981), purifying the luciferase, and determining that it was regulated through daily synthesis and destruction, the first clock-regulated enzyme whose mode of regulation was determined (DUNLAP and HASTINGS 1981b). Meanwhile, although use of inhibitors yielded many blind alleys (ROBERTSON 1975), there emerged one thread of truth in many organisms: protein synthesis on 80s ribosomes at specific times of day was necessary for every eukaryotic clock examined. Phase shifts identified a "sensitive time of day," generally in the late night to early morning (JACKLET 1977; DUNLAP et al. 1980; DUNLAP and FELDMAN 1988), and chronic inhibition stopped the clock at dawn (e.g., KHALSA and BLOCK 1992). Moving beyond this to the proteins involved, however, would obviously be tough, and it required no brilliance to see that genetics was needed to identify the pertinent elements.
Although rhythms (and even some rhythm genetics) were known in Chlamydomonas (e.g., BRUCE 1972) and in Paramecium (e.g., BARNETT 1966), the two premier organisms with clocks and well-developed genetic systems were flies and Neurospora. And even in 1979, when I finished at Harvard, it was clear to me at least that the answer being universally sought would need to be phrased in the language of genetics and biochemistry. By then, Neurospora could be transformed (CASE et al. 1979) but Drosophila could not; biochemical genetics was invented in Neurospora, and biochemistry in flies was a challenge, so the choice of system when I began a postdoc seemed clear. I was aware of the breakthroughs in and using recombinant DNA technologies (libraries!, cloning!, sequencing!, chromosome walks!) that had been developed in part by friends on the third and fourth floors of the Harvard BioLabs, so it seemed natural to develop a postdoctoral fellowship, eventually funded by the Damon Runyon Foundation, around the cloning of clock genes. There were a few labs working on clocks in Neurospora—those of Malcolm Sargent, Stuart Brody, and Jerry Feldman—and, having settled on a genetic and molecular approach, for a postdoc I picked Feldman's, the one in which the clock mutants had been isolated. I set off for Santa Cruz.
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Much of the problem with dissecting any problem is learning to think about it in the right way, and the first months in my own lab were spent doing just that—reading and thinking. Then, during a long weekend of 14-hr days, it all poured out in the text for two full grant proposals that described the areas in which I would work for the next decade and beyond. This was a time when the cell cycle was being worked out, and the smart money had it that the circadian cycle would be something like the cell cycle—i.e., a series of events occurring one after the other to create a cycle. In this model, where G1/S cyclins lead to S phase and S phase cyclins, which lead to M phase and M phase cyclins, which lead back to Start, each cyclin defines a phase in the cell cycle and it is impossible to stop at a "phaseless" point. However, this was just what Art Winfree had shown for the circadian oscillator; using light pulses of just the right strength and duration given at just the right time, he could send the circadian cycle to a place corresponding to "no phase" [equivalent to "all phases" (WINFREE 1967, 1971; WINFREE and TWADDLE 1981)]. This suggested that thinking too much along the lines of cell cycles would be a distraction, and this was true to a point: circadian cycles had their own logic. An organizing concept for me was that the clock puzzle was really three different problems in cellular metabolism (e.g., ESKIN 1979), each of which could be approached separately:
- How do you build a clock—that is, what are the gears and cogs, how do they mesh, what regulates them, and how do they regulate one another so the collective output is a molecular/biochemical cycle with all the circadian characteristics? Underlying our expectations was theory from a number of sources (e.g., FRIESEN and BLOCK 1984; BRENNER et al. 1990), which suggested that a negative feedback loop could yield an oscillation.
- Entrainment: how do abrupt and transient changes in the environment, chiefly ambient light or temperature, reset the phase of the clock and thereby bring internal time into line with external time?
- Output: how is an intracellular molecular cycle used to regulate the behavior of the cell?
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2 cM from oli and 2.5 cM from for. Therefore, we started a walk at the selectable marker oli—perforce a bidirectional walk, since there was no way to orient proximal vs. distal until the target at the other end of the walk was found. This took us to five different chromosomes before we learned to check each step by Southerns; finally, in 1986 we confirmed by transformation/rescue that we had for, thereby proving that we had walked (>200 kb) across frq. Having asserted that rescue by transformation would work for a clock gene as easily as it had for a nutritional gene, we began to screen candidate cosmids by transformation into frq9. Cosmids from one region rescued the circadian rhythm in conidial spore formation ("banding") on race tubes, thus confirming the location of frq. Sometime after we started this in 1984, the Drosophila clock gene, period (per), was cloned by the Hall/Rosbash and Young groups who were able to take advantage of the excellent cytogenetics of Drosophila to pinpoint the correct chromosomal region. None of these three researchers were "circadian rhythms biologists," a by-product in part of the dismissal of genetic approaches within the field. If I felt "scooped" at all by the cloning of per, I do not recall it; for me, it was more than compensated by the arrival of Jeff Hall, who became a mentor and sounding board, into the field. The collective publications on per in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (BARGIELLO and YOUNG 1984) and in Cell (REDDY et al. 1984) contained less information than we had when we cloned frq 2 years later. Whereas in 1984 it was sufficient just to have cloned an interesting gene, between 1984 and 1986 the bar was rapidly rising: by the time we had frq, we needed transcript and sequence information for a major publication. We dug in and groped toward the rising bar for publication, manually sequencing nearly 9 kb (no mean feat in those days) and mapping transcripts arising from the frq genomic region. This was sufficient to carry it to the level of the vanity journal to which we aspired, Nature (MCCLUNG et al. 1989).
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A question that loomed large at the time was whether expression of clock components cycled, as this would clearly implicate the clock genes as encoding elements of mechanism rather than elements that simply enabled a clock. Although we were hard at work on this, molecular confirmation that frq expression was rhythmic was delayed for several years due to a technical problem. Rhythm biochemistry in Neurospora was always done in liquid cultures having little added glucose (NAKASHIMA 1981; LOROS et al. 1989), ostensibly to slow growth and development, leaving only rhythm-pertinent metabolism. Indeed, the clock runs well under these conditions, but frq is expressed only at extremely low levels, levels virtually below detection. Although Jennifer had produced convincing data showing rhythmic frq expression by the time of a meeting that Bambos Kyriacou ran in Leicester, United Kingdom, in early 1992, it was not until Ben Aronson, perhaps inadvertently, tried high glucose for culture and analysis of frq that it became possible to routinely follow frq mRNA levels over time (ARONSON et al. 1994a). However, efforts by Kathy Siwicki in Jeff Hall's Drosophila lab led the way in the identification of cycling clock components. Rhythm biochemistry in the fly was given a giant leg up by the fact that the cells in the fly eyes have clocks, so the heads (which could be isolated as a quasi-pure fraction by freezing and shaking) represented an enormous enrichment for clock molecules, even though the clock molecules in the eyes had no role in maintaining the free-running behavioral rhythms. In 1988, using antipeptide antisera for immunocytochemistry, Kathy provided the first evidence for rhythmic expression of a putative clock molecule (Drosophila PER; SIWICKI et al. 1988), and Paul Hardin in the Rosbash lab provided the logical and essential extension of this 2 years later with the demonstration that per mRNA was rhythmically expressed in the head with a period length appropriate to the per allele (HARDIN et al. 1990). The facile (and ultimately correct) interpretation of the rhythmic expression of PER and (later) frq was that they controlled their own expression at the core of the clock, although the possibility remained that PER or FRQ fed back in some different and perhaps remote way, for example, in regulating a behavioral or physiological output (rather than being a core element) that would feed back to affect the pace of the oscillator or to affect input. In this scenario, a null mutant could be arrhythmic at the overt, whole-organism level (no output), and alleles defective in feedback to the core clock would result in altered period lengths. [Years later, prd-4 provided exactly this precedent: a mutant that changes period length by affecting input but that is not a part of the clock (PREGUEIRO et al. 2006).] Also contributing to the uncertainty in interpretation was the observation that simple expression of per from a (presumably constitutive) heat-shock promoter was sufficient to rescue arrhythmicity in per-null flies (EWER et al. 1988): maybe the transcriptional rhythms were not really necessary after all. Figure 1 provides a "clock model" from this era. One could put the products of clock genes "in the loop," but it was not clear where or how.
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In the field of rhythms, phase refers to the time in the cycle when something happens. Two rhythms can have identical periods but be different if they are "out of sync," i.e., if they have different phases. We were developing theory and tests to show that frq encoded a component rather than an enabler of the clock and that daily expression of frq was a part of the clock. In this concrete model, the phase of the cycle at which frq expression rises and falls has real biological meaning. Chronic overexpression of frq could stop the rhythm and release from overexpression restored the rhythm, but if frq encoded a component, then the phase that the clock assumed upon release had to be dictated by when frq levels fell. We took extra time to look carefully at frq rhythmicity and phase following release from inducer, as well as to develop methods for gene replacements (ARONSON et al. 1994c) so as to engineer a definitive null mutant of frq (ARONSON et al. 1994b) as a recipient for transformations. Armed with these new tools, Ben Aronson carried out the experiment(s) that demonstrated negative feedback of proteins (FRQ) on the genes that encode them (frq) in the service of a circadian oscillator. We showed that (1) overexpression of frq from a heterologous promoter reduced expression of frq from its native promoter in both a frq+ and a frq null background (i.e., neither overt rhythmicity nor output was needed to mediate feedback); (2) continued overexpression resulted in arrhythmicity (i.e., rhythmic frq expression, not simply expression, was needed for the clock to run); and (3) the phase of the rhythm was determined by the time at which the cell was released from overexpression: autoregulation of frq expression controlled rhythmicity as well as both period and phase. We wrote, "The amount of frq transcript in the cell is regulated by the clock, frq mRNA encodes FRQ, and point mutations in FRQ set the period of the clock; frq must therefore determine the timing of its own expression through regulation of transcript synthesis or turnover. The characteristic loss of stable rhythmicity in frq loss-of-function mutations shows that this gene is critical for circadian rhythmicity, and the observation of high amounts of transcript in frq9 [a frameshifted null mutant] suggests autoregulation by negative feedback" (ARONSON et al. 1994a, p. 1581). Rhythms in per expression were already known, and we inferred that the other untested aspect of this story in Drosophila would also be would true, namely that "These transcript and protein cycles provide a ready explanation for the universal effectiveness of transcriptional and translational inhibitors in clock resetting. This universality, in turn, suggests that the clock-gene transcript and protein cycling seen and implied here [in Neurospora] may be a universal feature of circadian oscillators"—as indeed they seem to be (ARONSON et al. 1994a, p. 1583). Figure 2 is taken from ARONSON et al. (1994a).
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In hindsight, however, it is hard to see why this was perceived as so difficult since in its resolution the answer was so simple. A part of the barrier to apprehending the simplicity lay in the fact that the very idea of intracellular transcription/translation feedback loops as underlying all organismal eukaryotic clocks was still very novel (and not universally accepted). Instead, resetting mechanisms were envisioned as complicated affairs in which a photoreceptor in one tissue would trigger a signal that would transit to another tissue wherein magical things would transpire. Also, the cycle in frq mRNA peaked in the morning, whereas per (and later, tim), thought to encode the components in the Drosophila clock analogous to frq, peaked at night. If the oscillators worked in a similar manner, how could these be 180° out of phase? The first hint that frq expression was light responsive came from some fishing experiments by Jennifer Loros in the days before Ben Aronson discovered how to nutritionally boost frq expression; using large quantities of tissue and very (very) hot probes, Jennifer thought that she saw light-induced frq expression. This emboldened Sue Crosthwaite, a year or so later when we could see frq mRNA more easily, to do a time course of frq expression following light exposure; she found a lovely >10-fold induction within just 5 min after lights on. In the context of all the anticipated complexity surrounding the nature of the resetting mechanism, our initial observation that frq was rapidly and strongly light induced did not immediately suggest a global mechanism for resetting. Instead, we focused on proving that the threshold and fluence response for frq induction corresponded to that for clock resetting and that the clock effect was really mediated by transcriptional induction of frq and not some other ancillary effect such as message stabilization. However, while messing around with Sue's data, in particular plotting the daily cycle of frq transcript levels with the PRC on the same time axis (as in Figure 3), I was led to one of the few actual eureka moments that I can recall: the realization that all of light resetting, both advances and delays, in large part could be explained simply by the fact that there was a daily cycle in frq transcript level and that light induced an abrupt upswing of frq expression. If light induced frq mRNA when it was on its way to the peak (late night to morning), it would bring the RNA level to peak faster, resulting in an advance; if frq mRNA was declining, light would increase the levels, countering the decline, and cause a delay. This unexpectedly straightforward explanation implied that the inherent molecular mechanisms behind advances and delays were not distinct, as some had supposed, but were exactly the same. Light induced frq, and it was the dynamics of the clock that made the effects of light different at different times. In CROSTHWAITE et al. (1995, p. 1009), we wrote, "Together these data can explain ... how a simple unidirectional physical or molecular signal and response (the light induction of frq) can be turned into a bidirectional clock response (clock phase-specific advances and delays)."
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The impact of the answer went beyond Neurospora because the real differences among organisms allowed distinct predictions. For example, remembering that per cycled out of phase to frq, we predicted that "light might be expected to entrain the Drosophila oscillator by acting rapidly to depress the level or activity of per or PER" (CROSTHWAITE et al. 1995, p. 1010). In this way, a mechanism similar to Neurospora's or its converse (light-mediated decay of the clock component) could explain resetting in all organisms; and later work in Drosophila (e.g., HUNTER-ENSOR et al. 1996) and in mammals (e.g., SHIGEYOSHI et al. 1997) has shown this to be the universal mechanism for light resetting. "We set out to determine the initial clock-specific event in light-induced resetting of the clock, and determined the light induction of frq to be a likely candidate. The data have in addition provided a substantial and specific confirmation of the major molecular predictions of [Pittendrigh's] model for entrainment, which predicted entrainment via [rapid] light-induced changes in a state variable of the oscillator. Since circadian physiological data, in a wide variety of organisms, has been consistent with the behavioral predictions of this model, it seems likely that most circadian clocks will be reset in a manner similar to that reported here for frq and Neurospora through rapid light-induced changes in an oscillator state variable" (CROSTHWAITE et al. 1995, p. 1010). The cover of the journal in which Sue's work appeared showed a photo of the Neurospora banding rhythm phase shifted by light and was captioned "How Light Resets the Clock."
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-phosphatase to resolve the phosphorylations, we were surprised to see two FRQ bands, a long and a short form (GARCEAU et al. 1997). He and postdoc Yi Liu went on to show that these were the result of temperature modulation of both the choice of starting ATG and the overall amount of FRQ, eliciting a series of studies as to how and why this happens. Temperature-modulated FRQ expression provides a mechanism for temperature resetting of the clock (LIU et al. 1998) and means by which the effective range for rhythmicity could be extended (LIU et al. 1997), the period length fine tuned, and the daily waveform sculpted in a changing environment (DIERNFELLNER et al. 2007). In hindsight, we saw that Norm had been making his extracts from cultures grown at a temperature where relatively little of the long form of FRQ containing his N-terminal antigen was made, which is why he could not see it. In any case, with the ability to see FRQ, we could begin to come to closure on mechanism. EARLY DAYS: THE LURE...
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The time required for each phase could be actively modeled in vivo by using the inducible qa-2 promoter to drive a frq+ transgene in strains bearing the frameshifted null mutant frq9. Lacking negative feedback from FRQ, frq9 mRNA is normally expressed at a high level (ARONSON et al. 1994a), but induction of FRQ in such a cell would shut down frq9 mRNA expression; the time required for this shutdown would provide a limit for how long the normal repressive phase should take in the cycle. Subsequently, when the inducer was removed, we could ask how long it took for the heterologous FRQ to decay away and for expression of frq9 mRNA to return to its normal high levels; this would provide a limit for how long the activating phase would normally take.
In a model for the circadian cycle analogous to the cell cycle in which many different subsequent steps and proteins were involved, the steps required for turning frq expression on and off should have occupied only a part of the day, in the same way that the events involved in activation and inactivation of any one cyclin involve only a part of the cell cycle. However, much to our surprise, we saw that repression took
3–6 hr and decay of FRQ another
14–18 hr, a long period during which de novo FRQ synthesis has stopped. In other words, instead of the expected necessity to invoke a series of events to make up the long
22-hr time constant of the clock, it appeared instead that the entire cycle might be described by the simple self-regulated expression and subsequent turnover of FRQ, with the long circadian time constant largely attributable just to the factors controlling inactivation/turnover of FRQ. We surmised that "this circadian oscillator can be largely described by the events and molecules surrounding activation and repression of frq alone" (MERROW et al. 1997, p. 3882). Even in hindsight, this seems a pretty good guess, and later work (LIU et al. 2000; RUOFF et al. 2005) clearly showed that changes in FRQ phosphorylation impacted its turnover and dictated circadian period length. MERROW et al. (1997), with the separate but nearly coincident demonstration of a daily cycle of synthesis, processive phosphorylation, and ultimate precipitous turnover of FRQ (GARCEAU et al. 1997; LIU et al. 1997), provided a plausible molecular basis for the circadian-cycle-as-an-FRQ-cycle idea, which has subsequently been shown to be true. In Neurospora, as in other eukaryotic circadian systems, phosphorylation-mediated turnover of the negative elements of the clock loop are principal factors in determining the length of the circadian day. More generally, the kinetics of the circadian cycle in Neurospora, in Drosophila, and in mammals is described principally as a cycle in the expression of clock components, their action in turning off their own expression and their subsequent turnover in a single feedback loop. Although in the ensuing decade we have learned a great deal more about additional interlocked loops that affect this core, it remains that such a core loop is the only aspect of the clock that appears essential for expression of all overt true circadian rhythms in eukaryotes.
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The unexpected collapse of models that invoked sequential action of proteins in many steps focused our interest on what was actually driving frq expression in the cell. It now seemed as if this activator might be the only remaining component in the clock loop. Identifying it might be sufficient to close the loop. And it might turn up the first example of a clock protein with an identifiable biochemical function, a function that would nail down the core mechanisms as well as provide a candidate for phylogenetic conservation.
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Neurospora is normally yellow/orange in color due to the presence of carotenoids whose production in vegetative tissue is induced by light; mutational analyses many decades earlier had identified genes required for this light induction, white collar-1 (wc-1) and wc-2 (PERKINS et al. 1962). [They were so named because of their appearance on slants. Normally, mycelia of Neurospora will cover an agar slant, eventually giving rise to aerial hyphae that differentiate to yield asexual spores (conidia), so a side view of the top of a slant on a lab bench will reveal a ring of agar covered by yellow mycelia topped by yellow spores. Carotenoid production in spores is constitutive, but in mycelia it is induced by light. As a result, in agar slants of blind mutants viewed from the side, white mycelia will form a ring (a collar) around the top of a slant beneath the yellow spores; hence the name white collar-1 and white collar-2 for the two genes whose mutation yielded blind mutants.] Since the wc mutants were blind, it was natural for us to ask whether these wc genes were required for the light induction of frq, and to no one's surprise, they were. However, we were surprised to see that even in the dark, the levels of frq mRNA in both wc-1 and wc-2 mutant strains were quite low. Moreover, the strains bearing these mutations were actually overtly arrhythmic (CROSTHWAITE et al. 1997). This had been observed before but shrugged off on the assumption that, because the mutant strains were known to be blind, the clocks in these cells were probably not inherently arrhythmic but simply asynchronous and incapable of being synchronized by the light that they could not see. The absence of light induction of frq was consistent with this, but the low level of frq mRNA in both mutants suggested another possibility: that WC-1 and WC-2 actually had an additional and qualitatively distinct function in that they were required in the dark to activate frq expression. In other words, these mutants would define the missing link in the circadian feedback loop. The controls to test the arrhythmicity-via-asynchronicity assumption were simple: we could use a temperature pulse, which works independently of photoreceptors, to reset the clock and initiate rhythmicity. The temperature treatments failed to elicit rhythms, and molecular analyses confirmed our hunch in that the wc mutants lacked both overt and molecular rhythms in frq or FRQ expression: wc-1 and wc-2 were essential clock genes. [The article, even in hindsight, makes interesting reading to me as much because of what is correct or correctly predicted as because of what is not. The alleles of wc-1 and wc-2 that we used had been described as nulls, but subsequent molecular and physiological analyses showed that they were in fact only extreme hypomorphs (COLLETT et al. 2002; LEE et al. 2003); the resulting residual activity played out in some ways that required some explanatory gymnastics in the prose, but in the end this did not interfere with reaching the right answer. With the ready availability of engineered whole-gene deletions now in Neurospora (COLOT et al. 2006), this need never again be a problem.] Taken altogether, the evidence was consistent with WC-1 and WC-2 encoding the molecular activator of frq, the first positive element in any circadian feedback loop. But what did they do?
Fortuitously, while Sue's work was being completed, Giuseppe Macino and colleagues had cloned wc-1 (BALLARIO et al. 1996) and wc-2 (LINDEN and MACINO 1997) and had shown them to act together as a "white collar complex." These protein–protein interactions were mediated in each protein by PAS domains, a motif originally, if unwittingly, discovered in PER (HUANG et al. 1993). Moreover, WC-1/WC-2 bound to the DNA of pertinent promoters (CARATTOLI et al. 1994) and had sequences consistent with their functions as card-carrying dyed-in-the-wool GATA-family DNA-binding transcription factors, complete with zinc-finger DNA-binding domains, nuclear localization signals, and Gln-rich or acidic activation domains (reviewed in LINDEN et al. 1999).
So here, then, was the missing link that tied up many a crucial loose end. In a circadian feedback loop believed to be based on daily transcription and translation, two novel clock proteins were identified as transcription factors: a biochemical function for a clock molecule wholly consistent with the anticipated molecular basis of the clock. As transcription factors, the means by which they could provide the anticipated activating function in the loop by driving frq expression was obvious, so now the predicted activating and repressing components of the loop were known. The identification of PAS domains in the WC proteins provided the long-anticipated example of a motif that was phylogenetically conserved among diverse clock proteins and led us to predict that "the association between clock molecules and PAS domains may extend well beyond the fungi and invertebrates" (CROSTHWAITE et al. 1997, p. 768), as indeed it does: PAS domains are found in the activators of every circadian feedback loop known in the fungi and animals—from Neurospora to Drosophila to mice, fish, and humans. In each of these systems, two proteins interact via PAS domains to make a heterodimeric complex (such as WC-1/WC-2) that drives rhythmic expression of the negative element(s) of the feedback loop: WC-1/WC-2 in Neurospora drives the negative element frq; CYC/CLK in Drosophila drives per and tim; BMAL1/CLOCK and BMAL1/NPAS2 in mammals drive the analogous negative elements. WC-1/WC-2 was the first of these to be described.
Another aspect of the sequence conservation among PAS domains also struck us: among the many proteins having PAS domains were five photoreceptors, and in fact so many have since been identified that they now describe a specific subclass of PAS domains, the LOV domain (for light/oxygen/voltage sensing; HUALA et al. 1997). wc-1 and wc-2, of course, had been identified first as essential for photoreception, but now we had associated them with a novel and exclusively dark function: maintenance of a sustained circadian oscillation. Observing more broadly, there was a well-appreciated and universal association of circadian rhythmicity with the capacity for photoreception—in animals often in the same tissues and now in Neurospora in the same proteins. For a photoreceptor to transduce a gradual lights-on dawn signal into a pulse rather than a ramp or step function, there has to be a light-triggered deactivation of the photoreceptor molecule—a negative feedback loop. Given this, along with the molecular conservation of PAS domains in clock molecules and in photoreceptors, the possibility occurred to us that, perhaps, clock feedback loops first arose from modification of negative feedback loops associated with photoperception. As we wrote, "the widespread occurrence of PAS domains in light- and clock-associated proteins, combined with the predicted ancient origins of circadian rhythmicity, suggest that circadian clocks may have arisen from the cellular processes associated with the perception of the daily light-dark cycle and the transduction of this information in the cell to regulate metabolism in response to light" (CROSTHWAITE et al. 1997, p. 768). The prediction that PAS domains might recur in clock proteins was borne out later when PAS domains turned up in the first mammalian clock protein, CLOCK (KING et al. 1997), a similarity Michael Rosbash described as "a molecular link" between the mammalian clock and those of lower organisms (BARINAGA 1997). Extended sequence similarity between WC-1 and BMAL1 (LEE et al. 2000) is consistent with this common origin for rhythm generators, as is the striking similarity in the overall design of the transcription–translation feedback loop. It was and remains a nice idea for the origin of circadian clocks. The beauty of such theories about how processes evolve is that they are as impossible to prove as they are to disprove.
EARLY DAYS: THE LURE...
CIRCADIAN BIOLOGY IN THE...
NOT A LONG PERIOD,...
IDENTIFICATION OF CLOCK...
OUTPUT
A MECHANISM FOR THE...
PROOF OF NEGATIVE FEEDBACK...
HOW LIGHT RESETS THE...
WHERE THE HELL'S THE...
THE CIRCADIAN LOOP AS...
MOVING FROM MODELS TO...
A BIOCHEMICAL ACTIVITY FOR...
>THE END OF THE...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
LITERATURE CITED
During June of 1998, coincident in the journal with several of these articles, a Perspectives about these various accomplishments prepared by me appeared under the title "An End in the Beginning" (DUNLAP 1998). I used this title both because it brought to mind the idea of a cycle and because of where I thought the data and insights had placed the rhythms field. Physiological studies, beginning in the 1940s (and before) and reaching a crescendo in the 1970s, had defined and refined the definition of circadian rhythmicity until it was sufficiently explicit to allow informative genetic screens. This era yielded the restricted vocabulary (circadian vs. diurnal, free-running, phase response curve, entrainment, limit cycle, etc.) with which I have had to burden the reader, but that allowed the phenomenon to be precisely discussed and mutants to be characterized. This era also revealed the importance of critical daily episodes of clock protein translation. Reports of mutant screens in Drosophila and Neurospora in the 1970s, followed by cloning of the pertinent genes in the 1980s, were all directed toward developing a picture of how a clock could be assembled as much as toward identifying individual components. By mid-1997, in Neurospora, with the identification of both repressing and activating factors in the negative feedback loop, knowledge of their biochemical activities and proof that these cycling activities did not just reflect the clock but were the clock, this picture was largely in place, and by mid-1998 the picture (Figure 4) had been fleshed out in other model systems, flies, and mice.
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It was easy to assert (DUNLAP 1998) that there would be a great may additional things to discover as indeed there have been; the number of "circadian" articles continues to grow exponentially. But qualitatively the nature of the questions has changed. Once the pattern was elucidated on the basis of work from Neurospora and Drosophila, additional components could be much more easily identified through molecular biological rather than genetic routes. Indeed, although dozens of clock components and ancillary factors (kinases, transcriptional cofactors, etc.) have been reported in fungi, flies, and mammalian systems since 1998, nearly all have arisen first or simultaneously from biochemical or molecular biological studies rather than from genetic screens, although reverse genetic analysis of putative components remains the gold standard for discerning significance. The year 1998 is a good point to break as I am not sure that I have sufficient perspective on the past decade yet to do it justice.
The years 1997–1998 marked "the end of the beginning" phase of rhythms research, the era when the field succeeded in figuring out the big picture, the basic molecular logic underlying the oscillator and the aspect(s) of metabolism associated with it. I was blessed to fall upon a terrific and molecularly untouched problem, backstopped by decades of biology, at a time when it was possible to develop the right tools to answer the right questions. It was also a gift to work with some remarkable students and postdocs who were equally attracted to the problem and saw, in the same way that I did, the virtues of this marvelous system. Many of them have since gone on to run labs of their own in Neurospora. It was an exciting period, this time when the problem of how clocks work was cracked, and work on Neurospora played an undeniably prominent role in this story.
EARLY DAYS: THE LURE...
CIRCADIAN BIOLOGY IN THE...
NOT A LONG PERIOD,...
IDENTIFICATION OF CLOCK...
OUTPUT
A MECHANISM FOR THE...
PROOF OF NEGATIVE FEEDBACK...
HOW LIGHT RESETS THE...
WHERE THE HELL'S THE...
THE CIRCADIAN LOOP AS...
MOVING FROM MODELS TO...
A BIOCHEMICAL ACTIVITY FOR...
THE END OF THE...
>ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
LITERATURE CITED
EARLY DAYS: THE LURE...
CIRCADIAN BIOLOGY IN THE...
NOT A LONG PERIOD,...
IDENTIFICATION OF CLOCK...
OUTPUT
A MECHANISM FOR THE...
PROOF OF NEGATIVE FEEDBACK...
HOW LIGHT RESETS THE...
WHERE THE HELL'S THE...
THE CIRCADIAN LOOP AS...
MOVING FROM MODELS TO...
A BIOCHEMICAL ACTIVITY FOR...
THE END OF THE...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
>LITERATURE CITED
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