Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The eukaryotic circadian clock keeps time by using a transcription-translation feedback loop, which exhibits an architecture that is conserved across a diverse range of organisms, including fungi, plants and animals. Despite their mechanistic similarity, the molecular components of these clocks indicate a lack of common ancestry. Our study reveals that RUVBL2, which is a P-loop NTPase enzyme previously shown to affect circadian phase and amplitude as part of mammalian clock super-complexes, influences the circadian period through its remarkably slow ATPase activity, resembling the well-characterized KaiC-based clock in cyanobacteria. A screen of RUVBL2 variants identified arrhythmic, short-period and long-period mutants that altered circadian locomotor activity rhythms following delivery by adeno-associated virus to the murine suprachiasmatic nucleus. Enzymatic assays showed that wild-type RUVBL2 hydrolyses only around 13 ATP molecules a day, a vastly reduced turnover compared with typical ATPases. Notably, physical interactions between RUVBL2 orthologues and core clock proteins in humans, Drosophila and the fungus Neurospora, along with consistent circadian phenotypes of RUVBL2-mutant orthologues across species, reinforce their clock-related function in eukaryotes. Thus, as well as establishing RUVBL2 as a common core component in eukaryotic clocks, our study supports the idea that slow ATPase activity, initially discovered in cyanobacteria, is a shared feature of eukaryotic clocks.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12178907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08797-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

p-loop ntpase
8
slow atpase
8
atpase activity
8
eukaryotic clocks
8
ruvbl2
6
clock
5
circadian
5
ntpase ruvbl2
4
ruvbl2 conserved
4
conserved clock
4

Similar Publications

The eukaryotic circadian clock keeps time by using a transcription-translation feedback loop, which exhibits an architecture that is conserved across a diverse range of organisms, including fungi, plants and animals. Despite their mechanistic similarity, the molecular components of these clocks indicate a lack of common ancestry. Our study reveals that RUVBL2, which is a P-loop NTPase enzyme previously shown to affect circadian phase and amplitude as part of mammalian clock super-complexes, influences the circadian period through its remarkably slow ATPase activity, resembling the well-characterized KaiC-based clock in cyanobacteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The septins are conserved, filament-forming, guanine nucleotide binding cytoskeletal proteins. They assemble into palindromic protofilaments which polymerize further into higher-ordered structures that participate in essential intracellular processes such as cytokinesis or polarity establishment. Septins belong structurally to the P-Loop NTPases but, unlike their relatives Ras or Rho, do not mediate signals to effectors through GTP binding and hydrolysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

At the heart of many nucleoside triphosphatases is a conserved phosphate-binding sequence motif. A current model of early enzyme evolution proposes that this six to eight residue motif could have sparked the emergence of the very first nucleoside triphosphatases-a striking example of evolutionary continuity from simple beginnings, if true. To test this provocative model, seven disembodied Walker A-derived peptides were extensively computationally characterized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heat stress is a critical factor affecting global wheat production and productivity. In this study, out of 500 studied germplasm lines, a diverse panel of 126 wheat genotypes grown under twelve distinct environmental conditions was analyzed. Using 35 K single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping assays and trait data on five biochemical parameters, including grain protein content (GPC), grain amylose content (GAC), grain total soluble sugars (TSS), grain iron (Fe), and zinc (Zn) content, six multi-locus GWAS (ML-GWAS) models were employed for association analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF