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Published as doi: 10.1096/fj.07-8371com.
(The FASEB Journal. 2007;21:3866-3871.)
© 2007 FASEB
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Localization of a circadian clock in mammalian photoreceptors

Gianluca Tosini1, Alec J. Davidson, Chiaki Fukuhara, Manami Kasamatsu and Oscar Castanon-Cervantes

Circadian Rhythms and Sleep Disorders Program, Neuroscience Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

1Correspondence: Neuroscience Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine, 720 Westview Dr. SW, Atlanta, GA 30310-1495, USA. E-mail: gtosini{at}msm.edu

Several studies have demonstrated that the mammalian retina contains an autonomous circadian clock. Dopaminergic and other inner retinal neurons express many of the clock genes, whereas some of these genes seem to be absent from the photoreceptors. This observation has led to the suggestion that in mammalian retina the circadian pacemaker driving retinal rhythms is located in the inner nuclear layer. However, other evidence points to the photoreceptor layer as the site of the mammalian retinal clock. The goal of the present study was to demonstrate the presence of a functional circadian clock in photoreceptors. First, using laser capture microdissection and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, we investigated which of the clock genes are expressed in rat photoreceptors. We then prepared photoreceptor layer cultures from the retina to test whether these isolated cultures were viable and could drive circadian rhythms. Our data indicated that Per1, Per3, Cry1, Cry2, Clock, Bmal1, Rev-erb{alpha}, and Rora RNAs were present in the photoreceptors, whereas we were unable to amplify mRNA for Per2 and Npas2. Photoreceptor layers obtained from Period1-luciferase rats expressed a robust circadian rhythm in bioluminescence and melatonin synthesis. These results demonstrate that mammalian photoreceptors contain the circadian pacemaker driving rhythmic melatonin synthesis.—Tosini, G., Davidson, A. J., Fukuhara, C., Kasamatsu, M., Castanon-Cervantes, O. Localization of a circadian clock in mammalian photoreceptors.


Key Words: melatonin • circadian rhythms • clock genes • retina • rat







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