grant

Decoding the fundamental principles of autonomous clocks: mechanism,design and function

Organization COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCESLocation NEW YORK, UNITED STATESPosted 20 Sept 2023Deadline 31 Aug 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2023
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Full Description

Project Summary:
Our knowledge of how cellular time is controlled has been centered almost exclusively within the realms of the

cell cycle. The long-standing paradigm of how the cell cycle is regulated holds that the principal Cdk/Cyclin

oscillator (CCO) acts a master clock for the cell. Incremental increase in the activity of this master clock has

been postulated to define a set of thresholds to time and execute different cellular events that lead to mitosis.

Recent advances, however, have called this textbook view into question, as they reveal the existence of

‘autonomous clocks’: timing mechanisms that are normally entrained by the CCO to run at the pace of nuclear

divisions, but have evolved to run autonomously with distinct timekeeping roles, so as to drive specific cellular

phenomena when the cell cycle is abruptly halted, mis-regulated or naturally silenced. Despite their emerging

significance in physiology and disease, the design principles of how autonomous clocks operate remain largely

unknown. Similarly, we still do not know whether and how autonomous clocks can self-tune to regulate their

function, or the biophysical underpinnings of how they couple to run in synchrony with the CCO during the cell

cycle. Here I propose to address these questions in the context of cellular metabolism, organelle biogenesis and

the maintenance of mitotic fidelity – three pivotal aspects of the cell cycle that enable successful cell divisions.

Bringing together a palette of latest techniques in fluorescent protein design, we will design a first-of-its-kind

oscillatory bifunctional enzyme reporter to identify the design principle of a potential autonomous clock

mechanism in cellular metabolism. By combining split-fluorescence, nanolanterns and CRISPR-based

recombineering technologies, we will innovate a scalable enzyme marker to unravel the genetic landscape of

how an autonomous clock can self-tune to regulate organelle biogenesis, or mis-tune to perturb mitotic fidelity

in disease. Finally, we will develop reversible optogenetics strategies to test a physics-inspired experimental

framework on how autonomous clocks can couple with the CCO to run at the pace of nuclear divisions during

the cell cycle. These studies will (i) decipher potentially generalizable mechanisms by which autonomous clocks

operate to time and initiate specific sub-cellular events, (ii) reveal mechanistic insights into the relationship

between the tuning and function of autonomous clocks via systematic disease-relevant genetic screens, and (iii)

yield uncharted information on the nature of how autonomous clocks couple to the CCO, helping to generate

scorable phenotypes for exploring molecules that mediate such coupling in dividing cells, or regulate a

decoupling when the CCO is inactivated in terminally differentiated cells. Broadly, these approaches will

significantly advance our ability to dissect the working principles of autonomous clocks, and promise the exciting

possibility of expanding our knowledge on their emerging roles in health and disease.

Grant Number: 7DP2GM154328-02
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Mustafa Aydogan

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