Cell Reports (Oct 2023)

Circadian clock1a coordinates neutrophil recruitment via nfe212a/duox-reactive oxygen species pathway in zebrafish

  • An-qi Chen,
  • Min Xue,
  • Cheng-zeng Qiu,
  • Hao-yi Zhang,
  • Ren Zhou,
  • Ling Zhang,
  • Zong-jun Yin,
  • Da-long Ren

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 10
p. 113179

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Neutrophil recruitment to inflammatory sites appears to be an evolutionarily conserved strategy to fight against exogenous insults. However, the rhythmic characteristics and underlying mechanisms of neutrophil migration on a 24-h timescale are largely unknown. Using the advantage of in vivo imaging of zebrafish, this study explored how the circadian gene clock1a dynamically regulates the rhythmic recruitment of neutrophils to inflammatory challenges. We generated a clock1a mutant and found that neutrophil migration is significantly increased in caudal fin injury and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection. Transcriptome sequencing, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), and dual-luciferase reporting experiments suggest that the clock1a gene regulates neutrophil migration by coordinating the rhythmic expression of nfe212a and duox genes to control the reactive oxygen species (ROS) level. This study ultimately provides a visual model to expand the understanding of the rhythmic mechanisms of neutrophil recruitment on a circadian timescale in a diurnal organism from the perspective of ROS.

Keywords