“The ubiquitin ligase SIAH2 is a female-specific regulator of circadian rhythms and metabolism”

Author:

Mekbib Tsedey,Suen Ting-Chung,Rollins-Hairston Aisha,Smith Kiandra,Armstrong ArielORCID,Gray Cloe,Owino Sharon,Baba Kenkichi,Baggs Julie E.ORCID,Ehlen J. ChristopherORCID,Tosini GianlucaORCID,DeBruyne Jason P.ORCID

Abstract

Circadian clocks enable organisms to predict and align their behaviors and physiologies to constant daily day-night environmental cycle. Because the ubiquitin ligase Siah2 has been identified as a potential regulator of circadian clock function in cultured cells, we have used SIAH2-deficient mice to examine its function in vivo. Our experiments demonstrate a striking and unexpected sexually dimorphic effect of SIAH2-deficiency on the regulation of rhythmically expressed genes in the liver. The absence of SIAH2 in females, but not in males, altered the expression of core circadian clock genes and drastically remodeled the rhythmic transcriptome in the liver by increasing the number of day-time expressed genes, and flipping the rhythmic expression from nighttime expressed genes to the daytime. These effects are not readily explained by effects on known sexually dimorphic pathways in females. Moreover, loss of SIAH2 in females, not males, preferentially altered the expression of transcription factors and genes involved in regulating lipid and lipoprotein metabolism. Consequently, SIAH2-deficient females, but not males, displayed disrupted daily lipid and lipoprotein patterns, increased adiposity and impaired metabolic homeostasis. Overall, these data suggest that SIAH2 may be a key component of a female-specific circadian transcriptional output circuit that directs the circadian timing of gene expression to regulate physiological rhythms, at least in the liver. In turn, our findings imply that sex-specific transcriptional mechanisms may closely interact with the circadian clock to tailor overt rhythms for sex-specific needs.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities

National Eye Institute

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Division of Integrative Organismal Systems

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference63 articles.

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