A database of tissue-specific rhythmically expressed human genes has potential applications in circadian medicine

Marc D. Ruben(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Gang Wu(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), David F. Smith(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Robert E. Schmidt(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Lauren J. Francey(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Yin Yeng Lee(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Ron C. Anafi(University of Pennsylvania), John B. Hogenesch(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center)
Science Translational Medicine
September 12, 2018
Cited by 321Open Access
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Abstract

The discovery that half of the mammalian protein-coding genome is regulated by the circadian clock has clear implications for medicine. Recent studies demonstrated that the circadian clock influences therapeutic outcomes in human heart disease and cancer. However, biological time is rarely given clinical consideration. A key barrier is the absence of information on tissue-specific molecular rhythms in the human body. We have applied the cyclic ordering by periodic structure (CYCLOPS) algorithm, designed to reconstruct sample temporal order in the absence of time-of-day information, to the gene expression collection of 13 tissues from 632 human donors. We identified rhythms in gene expression across the body; nearly half of protein-coding genes were shown to be cycling in at least 1 of the 13 tissues analyzed. One thousand of these cycling genes encode proteins that either transport or metabolize drugs or are themselves drug targets. These results provide a useful resource for studying the role of circadian rhythms in medicine and support the idea that biological time might play a role in determining drug response.


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