Abstract

Circadian rhythms in metabolism, physiology, and behavior originate from cell-autonomous circadian clocks located in many organs and structures throughout the body and that share a common molecular mechanism based on the clock genes and their protein products. In the mammalian neural retina, despite evidence supporting the presence of several circadian clocks regulating many facets of retinal physiology and function, the exact cellular location and genetic signature of the retinal clock cells remain largely unknown. Here we examined the expression of the core circadian clock proteins CLOCK, BMAL1, NPAS2, PERIOD 1(PER1), PERIOD 2 (PER2), and CRYPTOCHROME2 (CRY2) in identified neurons of the mouse retina during daily and circadian cycles. We found concurrent clock protein expression in most retinal neurons, including cone photoreceptors, dopaminergic amacrine cells, and melanopsin-expressing intrinsically photosensitive ganglion cells. Remarkably, diurnal and circadian rhythms of expression of all clock proteins were observed in the cones whereas only CRY2 expression was found to be rhythmic in the dopaminergic amacrine cells. Only a low level of expression of the clock proteins was detected in the rods at any time of the daily or circadian cycle. Our observations provide evidence that cones and not rods are cell-autonomous circadian clocks and reveal an important disparity in the expression of the core clock components among neuronal cell types. We propose that the overall temporal architecture of the mammalian retina does not result from the synchronous activity of pervasive identical clocks but rather reflects the cellular and regional heterogeneity in clock function within retinal tissue.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPhysiology, and behavior with respect to the 24-h rotations of the Earth and the associated variations in the external world

  • Circadian clocks orchestrate metabolism, physiology, and behavior with respect to the 24-h rotations of the Earth and the associated variations in the external world

  • We examined the expression of the core mammalian circadian clock proteins CLOCK, BMAL1, NPAS2, PER1, PERIOD 2 (PER2), and CRY2 in adult C57Bl/6J mouse retinas collected in early morning (ZT02-04) during a light/12-h dark (LD) cycle

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Summary

Introduction

Physiology, and behavior with respect to the 24-h rotations of the Earth and the associated variations in the external world. If not all, aspects of the physiology and function of the vertebrate retina vary on a daily basis These include photoreceptor disk shedding, gene expression, the synthesis and release of neurohormones and neurotransmitters (such as melatonin and dopamine), neuronal light responses, and components of the electroretinogram [3,4,5,6]. The only retinal cell type in which concurrent expression of the core clock components has been consistently observed is the dopaminergic amacrine cell [12,15,16,17] It is still largely unknown whether rhythms of clock gene transcript expression translate into rhythms of clock protein accumulation in retinal cells

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