PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Clock-dependent and system-driven oscillators interact in the suprachiasmatic nuclei to pace mammalian circadian rhythms.

  • Karine Abitbol,
  • Ségolène Debiesse,
  • François Molino,
  • Pietro Mesirca,
  • Isabelle Bidaud,
  • Yoichi Minami,
  • Matteo E Mangoni,
  • Kazuhiro Yagita,
  • Patrice Mollard,
  • Xavier Bonnefont

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. e0187001

Abstract

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Circadian clocks drive biological rhythms with a period of approximately 24 hours and keep in time with the outside world through daily resetting by environmental cues. While this external entrainment has been extensively investigated in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), the role of internal systemic rhythms, including daily fluctuations in core temperature or circulating hormones remains debated. Here, we show that lactating mice, which exhibit dampened systemic rhythms, possess normal molecular clockwork but impaired rhythms in both heat shock response gene expression and electrophysiological output in their SCN. This suggests that body rhythms regulate SCN activity downstream of the clock. Mathematical modeling predicts that systemic feedback upon the SCN functions as an internal oscillator that accounts for in vivo and ex vivo observations. Thus we are able to propose a new bottom-up hierarchical organization of circadian timekeeping in mammals, based on the interaction in the SCN between clock-dependent and system-driven oscillators.