The circadian clock mediates daily bursts of cell differentiation by periodically restricting cell-differentiation commitment. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Most mammalian cells have an intrinsic circadian clock that coordinates metabolic activity with the daily rest and wake cycle. The circadian clock is known to regulate cell differentiation, but how continuous daily oscillations of the internal clock can control a much longer, multiday differentiation process is not known. Here, we simultaneously monitor circadian clock and adipocyte-differentiation progression live in single cells. Strikingly, we find a bursting behavior in the cell population whereby individual preadipocytes commit to differentiate primarily during a 12-h window each day, corresponding to the time of rest. Daily gating occurs because cells irreversibly commit to differentiate within only a few hours, which is much faster than the rest phase and the overall multiday differentiation process. The daily bursts in differentiation commitment result from a differentiation-stimulus driven variable and slow increase in expression of PPARG, the master regulator of adipogenesis, overlaid with circadian boosts in PPARG expression driven by fast, clock-driven PPARG regulators such as CEBPA. Our finding of daily bursts in cell differentiation only during the circadian cycle phase corresponding to evening in humans is broadly relevant, given that most differentiating somatic cells are regulated by the circadian clock. Having a restricted time each day when differentiation occurs may open therapeutic strategies to use timed treatment relative to the clock to promote tissue regeneration.

publication date

  • August 8, 2022

Research

keywords

  • Adipocytes
  • Adipogenesis
  • Circadian Clocks
  • Circadian Rhythm
  • PPAR gamma

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC9388110

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85135551353

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1073/pnas.2204470119

PubMed ID

  • 35939672

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 119

issue

  • 33