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An intrinsically disordered region controlling condensation of a circadian clock component and rhythmic transcription in the liver.

Citation
Zhu, K., et al. “An Intrinsically Disordered Region Controlling Condensation Of A Circadian Clock Component And Rhythmic Transcription In The Liver.”. Molecular Cell, pp. 3457-3469.e7.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Kun Zhu, Isaac J Celwyn, Dongyin Guan, Yang Xiao, Xiang Wang, Wenxiang Hu, Chunjie Jiang, Lan Cheng, Rafael Casellas, Mitchell A Lazar
Keywords 3D genome, REV-ERB, circadian, condensates, intrinsically disordered region, liver, repression, Transcription
Abstract

Circadian gene transcription is fundamental to metabolic physiology. Here we report that the nuclear receptor REV-ERBα, a repressive component of the molecular clock, forms circadian condensates in the nuclei of mouse liver. These condensates are dictated by an intrinsically disordered region (IDR) located in the protein's hinge region which specifically concentrates nuclear receptor corepressor 1 (NCOR1) at the genome. IDR deletion diminishes the recruitment of NCOR1 and disrupts rhythmic gene transcription in vivo. REV-ERBα condensates are located at high-order transcriptional repressive hubs in the liver genome that are highly correlated with circadian gene repression. Deletion of the IDR disrupts transcriptional repressive hubs and diminishes silencing of target genes by REV-ERBα. This work demonstrates physiological circadian protein condensates containing REV-ERBα whose IDR is required for hub formation and the control of rhythmic gene expression.

Year of Publication
2023
Journal
Molecular cell
Volume
83
Issue
19
Number of Pages
3457-3469.e7
Date Published
10/2023
ISSN Number
1097-4164
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2023.09.010
Alternate Journal
Mol Cell
PMID
37802023
PMCID
PMC10575687
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