Light-Induced Degradation of TIMELESS and Entrainment of the <i>Drosophila</i> Circadian Clock

Michael P. Myers(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Karen Wager‐Smith(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Adrian Rothenfluh(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Michael W. Young(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
March 22, 1996
Cited by 464

Abstract

Two genes, period (per) and timeless (tim), are required for production of circadian rhythms in Drosophila. The proteins encoded by these genes (PER and TIM) physically interact, and the timing of their association and nuclear localization is believed to promote cycles of per and tim transcription through an autoregulatory feedback loop. Here it is shown that TIM protein may also couple this molecular pacemaker to the environment, because TIM is rapidly degraded after exposure to light. TIM accumulated rhythmically in nuclei of eyes and in pacemaker cells of the brain. The phase of these rhythms was differentially advanced or delayed by light pulses delivered at different times of day, corresponding with phase shifts induced in the behavioral rhythms.


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