The epidermal circadian clock integrates and subverts brain signals to guarantee skin homeostasis

In mammals, the circadian clock network drives daily rhythms of tissue-specific homeostasis. To dissect daily inter-tissue communication, we constructed a mouse minimal clock network comprising only two nodes: the peripheral epidermal clock and the central brain clock. By transcriptomic and function...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Hauptverfasser: Mortimer, Thomas, Zinna, Valentina Maria, Atalay, Müge, Laudanna, Carmelo, Deryagin, Oleg, Posas Solanes, Guillem, Smith, Jacob G, García Lara, Elisa, Vaca Dempere, Mireia, Monteiro de Assis, Leonardo Vinícius, Heyde, Isabel, Koronowski, Kevin B, Petrus, Paul, Greco, Carolina M, Forrow, Stephen, Oster, Henrik, Sassone-Corsi, Paolo, Welz, Patrick Simon, Muñoz Cánoves, Pura, Aznar Benitah, Salvador
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:In mammals, the circadian clock network drives daily rhythms of tissue-specific homeostasis. To dissect daily inter-tissue communication, we constructed a mouse minimal clock network comprising only two nodes: the peripheral epidermal clock and the central brain clock. By transcriptomic and functional characterization of this isolated connection, we identified a gatekeeping function of the peripheral tissue clock with respect to systemic inputs. The epidermal clock concurrently integrates and subverts brain signals to ensure timely execution of epidermal daily physiology. Timely cell-cycle termination in the epidermal stem cell compartment depends upon incorporation of clock-driven signals originating from the brain. In contrast, the epidermal clock corrects or outcompetes potentially disruptive feeding-related signals to ensure the optimal timing of DNA replication. Together, we present an approach for cataloging the systemic dependencies of daily temporal organization in a tissue and identify an essential gate-keeping function of peripheral circadian clocks that guarantees tissue homeostasis.
ISSN:1875-9777
DOI:10.1016/j.stem.2024.04.013