Publication: Machine learning helps identify CHRONO as a circadian clock component
Files
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Anafi, Ron C.
Lee, Yoo
Sato, Trey K.
Venkataraman, Anand
Ramanathan, Chidambaram
Hughes, Michael E.
Baggs, Julie E.
Growe, Jacqueline
Liu, Andrew C.
Kim, Junhyong
Advisor
Publication Date
2014
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Over the last decades, researchers have characterized a set of ‘‘clock genes’’ that drive daily rhythms in physiology and behavior. This arduous work has yielded results with far-reaching consequences in metabolic, psychiatric, and neoplastic disorders. Recent attempts to expand our understanding of circadian regulation have moved beyond the mutagenesis screens that identified the first clock components, employing higher throughput genomic and proteomic techniques. In order to further accelerate clock gene discovery, we utilized a computer-assisted approach to identify and prioritize candidate clock components. We used a simple form of probabilistic machine learning to integrate biologically relevant, genome-scale data and ranked genes on their similarity to known clock components. We then used a secondary experimental screen to characterize the top candidates. We found that several physically interact with known clock components in a mammalian two-hybrid screen and modulate in vitro cellular rhythms in an immortalized mouse fibroblast line (NIH 3T3). One candidate, Gene Model 129, interacts with BMAL1 and functionally represses the key driver of molecular rhythms, the BMAL1/CLOCK transcriptional complex. Given these results, we have renamed the gene CHRONO (computationally highlighted repressor of the network oscillator). Bi-molecular fluorescence complementation and co-immunoprecipitation demonstrate that CHRONO represses by abrogating the binding of BMAL1 to its transcriptional co-activator CBP. Most importantly, CHRONO knockout mice display a prolonged free-running circadian period similar to, or more drastic than, six other clock components. We conclude that CHRONO is a functional clock component providing a new layer of control on circadian molecular dynamics.
Description
Source:
PLOS Biology
Publisher:
Public Library of Science
Keywords:
Subject
Biochemical research methods, Biochemistry and molecular biology