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research article

Circadian rhythms and proteomics: It's all about posttranslational modifications!

Mauvoisin, Daniel  
September 1, 2019
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-Systems Biology And Medicine

The circadian clock is a molecular endogenous timekeeping system and allows organisms to adjust their physiology and behavior to the geophysical time. Organized hierarchically, the master clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei, coordinates peripheral clocks, via direct, or indirect signals. In peripheral organs, such as the liver, the circadian clock coordinates gene expression, notably metabolic gene expression, from transcriptional to posttranslational level. The metabolism in return feeds back on the molecular circadian clock via posttranslational-based mechanisms. During the last two decades, circadian gene expression studies have mostly been relying primarily on genomics or transcriptomics approaches and transcriptome analyses of multiple organs/tissues have revealed that the majority of protein-coding genes display circadian rhythms in a tissue specific manner. More recently, new advances in mass spectrometry offered circadian proteomics new perspectives, that is, the possibilities of performing large scale proteomic studies at cellular and subcellular levels, but also at the posttranslational modification level. With important implications in metabolic health, cell signaling has been shown to be highly relevant to circadian rhythms. Moreover, comprehensive characterization studies of posttranslational modifications are emerging and as a result, cell signaling processes are expected to be more deeply characterized and understood in the coming years with the use of proteomics. This review summarizes the work studying diurnally rhythmic or circadian gene expression performed at the protein level. Based on the knowledge brought by circadian proteomics studies, this review will also discuss the role of posttranslational modification events as an important link between the molecular circadian clock and metabolic regulation. This article is categorized under: Laboratory Methods and Technologies > Proteomics Methods Physiology > Mammalian Physiology in Health and Disease Biological Mechanisms > Cell Signaling

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/wsbm.1450
Web of Science ID

WOS:000480289400002

Author(s)
Mauvoisin, Daniel  
Date Issued

2019-09-01

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-Systems Biology And Medicine
Volume

11

Issue

5

Article Number

e1450

Subjects

Medicine, Research & Experimental

•

Research & Experimental Medicine

•

cell signaling

•

circadian rhythms

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metabolism

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post-translational modifications

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proteomics

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ribosome profiling reveals

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controls lipid-metabolism

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rev-erba-alpha

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mass-spectrometry

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suprachiasmatic nucleus

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gene-expression

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clock gene

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transcriptional architecture

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period homologs

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ganglion-cells

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPNAE  
Available on Infoscience
August 25, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/160615
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