A protein fold switch joins the circadian oscillator to clock output in cyanobacteria

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Abstract

Organisms are adapted to the relentless cycles of day and night, because they evolved timekeeping systems called circadian clocks, which regulate biological activities with ∼24-hour rhythms. The clock of cyanobacteria is driven by a three-protein oscillator composed of KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC, which together generate a circadian rhythm of KaiC phosphorylation. We show that KaiB flips between two distinct three-dimensional folds, and its rare transition to an active state provides a time delay that is required to match the timing of the oscillator to that of Earth's rotation. Once KaiB switches folds, it binds phosphorylated KaiC and captures KaiA, which initiates a phase transition of the circadian cycle, and it regulates components of the clock-output pathway, which provides the link that joins the timekeeping and signaling functions of the oscillator.

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Chang, Y. G., Cohen, S. E., Phong, C., Myers, W. K., Kim, Y. I., Tseng, R., … Li Wang, A. (2015). A protein fold switch joins the circadian oscillator to clock output in cyanobacteria. Science, 349(6245), 324–328. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1260031

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