SUMMARY
Transcriptional and translational feedback loops in fungi and animals drive circadian rhythms in transcript levels that provide output from the clock, but post-transcriptional mechanisms also contribute. To determine the extent and underlying source of this regulation, we applied newly developed analytical tools to a long-duration, deeply sampled, circadian proteomics time course comprising half of the proteome. We found a quarter of expressed proteins are clock regulated, but >40% of these do not arise from clock-regulated transcripts, and our analysis predicts that these protein rhythms arise from oscillations in translational rates. Our data highlighted the impact of the clock on metabolic regulation, with central carbon metabolism reflecting both transcriptional and post-transcriptional control and opposing metabolic pathways showing peak activities at different times of day. The transcription factor CSP-1 plays a role in this metabolic regulation, contributing to the rhythmicity and phase of clock-regulated proteins.
Motivation
Time courses utilizing genome scale data are a common approach to identifying the biological pathways that are controlled by the circadian clock, an important regulator of organismal fitness. However, the methods used to detect circadian oscillations in these datasets are not able to accommodate changes in the amplitude of the oscillations over time, leading to an underestimation of the impact of the clock on biological systems.
Results
We have created a program to efficaciously identify oscillations in large-scale datasets, called the Extended Circadian Harmonic Oscillator application, or ECHO. ECHO utilizes an extended solution of the fixed amplitude mass-spring oscillator that incorporates the amplitude change coefficient. Employing synthetic datasets, we determined that ECHO outperforms existing methods in detecting rhythms with decreasing oscillation amplitudes and recovering phase shift. Rhythms with changing amplitudes identified from published biological datasets revealed distinct functions from those oscillations that were harmonic, suggesting purposeful biologic regulation to create this subtype of circadian rhythms.
Availability
ECHO’s full interface is available at https://github.com/delosh653/ECHO. An R package for this functionality, echo.find, can be downloaded at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=echo.find.
Supplementary information
Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
The circadian clock times cellular processes to the day/night cycle via a Transcription-Translation negative Feedback Loop (TTFL). However, a mechanistic understanding of the negative arm in both the timing of the TTFL and its control of output is lacking. We posited that the formation of negative-arm protein complexes was fundamental to clock regulation stemming from the negative arm. Using a modified peptide microarray approach termed Linear motif discovery using rational design (LOCATE), we characterized the interaction of the disordered negative-arm clock protein FREQUENCY to its partner protein FREQUENCY-Interacting RNA helicase. LOCATE identified a specific Short Linear Motif (SLiM) and interaction hotspot as well as positively charged islands that mediate electrostatic interactions, suggesting a model where negative arm proteins form a fuzzy complex essential for clock timing and robustness. Further analysis revealed that the positively charged islands were an evolutionarily conserved feature in higher eukaryotes and contributed to proper clock function.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.