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Autophagy Regulates the Liver Clock and Glucose Metabolism by Degrading CRY1.

Citation
Toledo, M., et al. “Autophagy Regulates The Liver Clock And Glucose Metabolism By Degrading Cry1.”. Cell Metabolism, pp. 268-281.e4.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Author Miriam Toledo, Ana Batista-Gonzalez, Emilio Merheb, Marie Louise Aoun, Elena Tarabra, Daorong Feng, Jaakko Sarparanta, Paola Merlo, Francesco Botrè, Gary J Schwartz, Jeffrey E Pessin, Rajat Singh
Keywords CRY1, FoxO1, LC3, Autophagy, circadian clock, Gluconeogenesis, glucose metabolism, liver, lysosome, obesity
Abstract

The circadian clock coordinates behavioral and circadian cues with availability and utilization of nutrients. Proteasomal degradation of clock repressors, such as cryptochrome (CRY)1, maintains periodicity. Whether macroautophagy, a quality control pathway, degrades circadian proteins remains unknown. Here we show that circadian proteins BMAL1, CLOCK, REV-ERBα, and CRY1 are lysosomal targets, and that macroautophagy affects the circadian clock by selectively degrading CRY1. Autophagic degradation of CRY1, an inhibitor of gluconeogenesis, occurs in a diurnal window when rodents rely on gluconeogenesis, suggesting that CRY1 degradation is time-imprinted to maintenance of blood glucose. High-fat feeding accelerates autophagic CRY1 degradation and contributes to obesity-associated hyperglycemia. CRY1 contains several light chain 3 (LC3)-interacting region (LIR) motifs, which facilitate the interaction of cargo proteins with the autophagosome marker LC3. Using mutational analyses, we identified two distinct LIRs on CRY1 that exert circadian glycemic control by regulating CRY1 degradation, revealing LIRs as potential targets for controlling hyperglycemia.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell metabolism
Volume
28
Issue
2
Number of Pages
268-281.e4
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1932-7420
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2018.05.023
Alternate Journal
Cell Metab.
PMID
29937374
PMCID
PMC6082686
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