Unmasking ultradian rhythms in gene expression

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Abstract

Biological oscillations with an ultradian time scale of 1 to several hours include cycles in behavioral arousal, episodic glucocorticoid release, and gene expression. Ultradian rhythms are thought to have an extrinsic origin because of a perceived absence of ultradian rhythmicity in vitro and a lack of known molecular ultradian oscillators. We designed a novel, non-spectral-analysis method of separating ultradian from circadian components and applied it to a published gene expression dataset with an ultradian sampling resolution. Ultradian rhythms in mouse hepatocytes in vivo have been published, andwe validated our approach using this control by confirming 175 of 323 ultradian genes identified in a prior study and found 862 additional ultradian genes. For the first time, we now report ultradian expression of >900 genes in vitro. Sixty genes exhibited ultradian transcriptional rhythmicity, both in vivo and in vitro, including 5 genes involved in the cell cycle. Within these 60 genes, we identified significant enrichment of specific DNA motifs in the 1000 bp proximal promotor, some of which associate with known transcriptional factors. These findings are in strong support of instrinsically driven ultradian rhythms and expose potentialmolecularmechanisms andfunctionsunderlying ultradian rhythmsthat remainunknown.-Vander Veen, D.R., Gerkema, M. P.Unmasking ultradian rhythms in gene expression. FASEBJ. 31, 743-750 (2017). www.fasebj.org.

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Van Der Veen, D. R., & Gerkema, M. P. (2017). Unmasking ultradian rhythms in gene expression. FASEB Journal, 31(2), 743–750. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201600872R

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