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Dive into the research topics where Ethan D. Buhr is active.

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Featured researches published by Ethan D. Buhr.


Nature | 2010

Disruption of the clock components CLOCK and BMAL1 leads to hypoinsulinaemia and diabetes

Biliana Marcheva; Kathryn Moynihan Ramsey; Ethan D. Buhr; Yumiko Kobayashi; Hong Su; Caroline H. Ko; Ganka Ivanova; Chiaki Omura; Shelley Mo; Martha Hotz Vitaterna; James P. Lopez; Louis H. Philipson; Christopher A. Bradfield; Seth D. Crosby; Lellean JeBailey; Xiaozhong Wang; Joseph S. Takahashi; Joseph Bass

The molecular clock maintains energy constancy by producing circadian oscillations of rate-limiting enzymes involved in tissue metabolism across the day and night. During periods of feeding, pancreatic islets secrete insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis, and although rhythmic control of insulin release is recognized to be dysregulated in humans with diabetes, it is not known how the circadian clock may affect this process. Here we show that pancreatic islets possess self-sustained circadian gene and protein oscillations of the transcription factors CLOCK and BMAL1. The phase of oscillation of islet genes involved in growth, glucose metabolism and insulin signalling is delayed in circadian mutant mice, and both Clock and Bmal1 (also called Arntl) mutants show impaired glucose tolerance, reduced insulin secretion and defects in size and proliferation of pancreatic islets that worsen with age. Clock disruption leads to transcriptome-wide alterations in the expression of islet genes involved in growth, survival and synaptic vesicle assembly. Notably, conditional ablation of the pancreatic clock causes diabetes mellitus due to defective β-cell function at the very latest stage of stimulus–secretion coupling. These results demonstrate a role for the β-cell clock in coordinating insulin secretion with the sleep–wake cycle, and reveal that ablation of the pancreatic clock can trigger the onset of diabetes mellitus.


Science | 2009

Circadian clock feedback cycle through NAMPT-mediated NAD+ biosynthesis.

Kathryn Moynihan Ramsey; Jun Yoshino; Cynthia S. Brace; Dana Abrassart; Yumiko Kobayashi; Biliana Marcheva; Hee Kyung Hong; Jason L. Chong; Ethan D. Buhr; Choogon Lee; Joseph S. Takahashi; Shin-ichiro Imai; Joseph Bass

Circadian Oscillations The 24-hour day-night cycle plays an important role in mammalian physiology and behavior and, as most travelers are well aware, there is an intimate link between our in-built circadian clocks and metabolic rhythms. This link is in part forged by the protein deacetylase SIRT1, which regulates the clocks molecular circuitry. SIRT1 uses as a cofactor the cellular metabolite NAD+, which is synthesized through a salvage pathway that includes the enzyme nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) (see the Perspective by Wijnen). Ramsey et al. (p. 651; published online 19 March) and Nakahata et al. (p. 654, published online 12 March) now show that NAMPT and NAD+ levels oscillate during the daily 24-hour cycle and that this oscillation is regulated by the circadian clock. Furthermore, the oscillations in NAD+ modulate the activity of SIRT1 feeding back into the circadian clock. A transcriptional-enzymatic feedback loop controls interactions between metabolism and circadian rhythms in mouse cells. The circadian clock is encoded by a transcription-translation feedback loop that synchronizes behavior and metabolism with the light-dark cycle. Here we report that both the rate-limiting enzyme in mammalian nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) biosynthesis, nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT), and levels of NAD+ display circadian oscillations that are regulated by the core clock machinery in mice. Inhibition of NAMPT promotes oscillation of the clock gene Per2 by releasing CLOCK:BMAL1 from suppression by SIRT1. In turn, the circadian transcription factor CLOCK binds to and up-regulates Nampt, thus completing a feedback loop involving NAMPT/NAD+ and SIRT1/CLOCK:BMAL1.


Cell | 2007

Intercellular Coupling Confers Robustness against Mutations in the SCN Circadian Clock Network

Andrew C. Liu; David K. Welsh; Caroline H. Ko; Hien G. Tran; Eric E. Zhang; Aaron A. Priest; Ethan D. Buhr; Oded Singer; Kirsten Meeker; Inder M. Verma; Francis J. Doyle; Joseph S. Takahashi; Steve A. Kay

Molecular mechanisms of the mammalian circadian clock have been studied primarily by genetic perturbation and behavioral analysis. Here, we used bioluminescence imaging to monitor Per2 gene expression in tissues and cells from clock mutant mice. We discovered that Per1 and Cry1 are required for sustained rhythms in peripheral tissues and cells, and in neurons dissociated from the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). Per2 is also required for sustained rhythms, whereas Cry2 and Per3 deficiencies cause only period length defects. However, oscillator network interactions in the SCN can compensate for Per1 or Cry1 deficiency, preserving sustained rhythmicity in mutant SCN slices and behavior. Thus, behavior does not necessarily reflect cell-autonomous clock phenotypes. Our studies reveal previously unappreciated requirements for Per1, Per2, and Cry1 in sustaining cellular circadian rhythmicity and demonstrate that SCN intercellular coupling is essential not only to synchronize component cellular oscillators but also for robustness against genetic perturbations.


Science | 2010

Temperature as a universal resetting cue for mammalian circadian oscillators

Ethan D. Buhr; Seung Hee Yoo; Joseph S. Takahashi

Time and Temperature Daily cycles in environmental temperature are an important cue for many organisms to synchronize their endogenous circadian clock. However, mammals do not respond to this cue. Studying mouse tissue, Buhr et al. (p. 379; see the Perspective by Edery) find that this resistance to temperature is a feature specific to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), a region of the mammalian brain that functions as the bodys master clock. In contrast, the clocks in peripheral tissues (for example, lung, liver) are fully capable of resetting in response to temperature changes and do so by a mechanism involving the heat shock pathway. The SCN drives daily rhythms in body temperature, and SCN-driven changes in temperature may synchronize the bodys peripheral clocks. Without its intrinsic resistance to temperature, the SCN could be subject to disruptive feedback effects. The master pacemaker in the mammalian brain resists the resetting effect of temperature to provide a universal entraining signal. Environmental temperature cycles are a universal entraining cue for all circadian systems at the organismal level with the exception of homeothermic vertebrates. We report here that resistance to temperature entrainment is a property of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) network and is not a cell-autonomous property of mammalian clocks. This differential sensitivity to temperature allows the SCN to drive circadian rhythms in body temperature, which can then act as a universal cue for the entrainment of cell-autonomous oscillators throughout the body. Pharmacological experiments show that network interactions in the SCN are required for temperature resistance and that the heat shock pathway is integral to temperature resetting and temperature compensation in mammalian cells. These results suggest that the evolutionarily ancient temperature resetting response can be used in homeothermic animals to enhance internal circadian synchronization.


Handbook of experimental pharmacology | 2013

Molecular components of the mammalian circadian clock

Ethan D. Buhr; Joseph S. Takahashi

Mammals synchronize their circadian activity primarily to the cycles of light and darkness in the environment. This is achieved by ocular photoreception relaying signals to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus. Signals from the SCN cause the synchronization of independent circadian clocks throughout the body to appropriate phases. Signals that can entrain these peripheral clocks include humoral signals, metabolic factors, and body temperature. At the level of individual tissues, thousands of genes are brought to unique phases through the actions of a local transcription/translation-based feedback oscillator and systemic cues. In this molecular clock, the proteins CLOCK and BMAL1 cause the transcription of genes which ultimately feedback and inhibit CLOCK and BMAL1 transcriptional activity. Finally, there are also other molecular circadian oscillators which can act independently of the transcription-based clock in all species which have been tested.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Emergence of Noise-Induced Oscillations in the Central Circadian Pacemaker

Caroline H. Ko; Yujiro R. Yamada; David K. Welsh; Ethan D. Buhr; Andrew C. Liu; Eric E. Zhang; Martin R. Ralph; Steve A. Kay; Daniel B. Forger; Joseph S. Takahashi

Computational modeling and experimentation explain how intercellular coupling and intracellular noise can generate oscillations in a mammalian neuronal network even in the absence of cell-autonomous oscillators.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Identification of diverse modulators of central and peripheral circadian clocks by high-throughput chemical screening

Zheng Chen; Seung Hee Yoo; Yong Sung Park; Keon Hee Kim; Shuguang Wei; Ethan D. Buhr; Zeng You Ye; Hui Lin Pan; Joseph S. Takahashi

The circadian clock coordinates daily oscillations of essential physiological and behavioral processes. Conversely, aberrant clocks with damped amplitude and/or abnormal period have been associated with chronic diseases and aging. To search for small molecules that perturb or enhance circadian rhythms, we conducted a high-throughput screen of approximately 200,000 synthetic compounds using Per2∷lucSV reporter fibroblast cells and validated 11 independent classes of molecules with Bmal1:luciferase reporter cells as well as with suprachiasmatic nucleus and peripheral tissue explants. Four compounds were found to lengthen the period in both central and peripheral clocks, including three compounds that inhibited casein kinase Iε in vitro and a unique benzodiazepine derivative acting through a non-GABAA receptor target. In addition, two compounds acutely induced Per2∷lucSV reporter bioluminescence, delayed the rhythm, and increased intracellular cAMP levels, but caused rhythm damping. Importantly, five compounds shortened the period of peripheral clocks; among them, four compounds also enhanced the amplitude of central and/or peripheral reporter rhythms. Taken together, these studies highlight diverse activities of drug-like small molecules in manipulating the central and peripheral clocks. These small molecules constitute a toolbox for probing clock regulatory mechanisms and may provide putative lead compounds for treatment of clock-associated diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Melanopsin and Mechanisms of Non-visual Ocular Photoreception

Timothy J. Sexton; Ethan D. Buhr; Russell N. Van Gelder

In addition to rods and cones, the mammalian eye contains a third class of photoreceptor, the intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cell (ipRGC). ipRGCs are heterogeneous irradiance-encoding neurons that primarily project to non-visual areas of the brain. Characteristics of ipRGC light responses differ significantly from those of rod and cone responses, including depolarization to light, slow on- and off-latencies, and relatively low light sensitivity. All ipRGCs use melanopsin (Opn4) as their photopigment. Melanopsin resembles invertebrate rhabdomeric photopigments more than vertebrate ciliary pigments and uses a Gq signaling pathway, in contrast to the Gt pathway used by rods and cones. ipRGCs can recycle chromophore in the absence of the retinal pigment epithelium and are highly resistant to vitamin A depletion. This suggests that melanopsin employs a bistable sequential photon absorption mechanism typical of rhabdomeric opsins.


eLife | 2013

Usf1, a suppressor of the circadian Clock mutant, reveals the nature of the DNA-binding of the CLOCK:BMAL1 complex in mice

Kazuhiro Shimomura; Vivek Kumar; Nobuya Koike; Tae Kyung Kim; Jason L. Chong; Ethan D. Buhr; Andrew Whiteley; Sharon S. Low; Chiaki Omura; Deborah Fenner; Joseph R. Owens; Marc Richards; Seung Hee Yoo; Hee Kyung Hong; Martha Hotz Vitaterna; Joseph Bass; Mathew T. Pletcher; Tim Wiltshire; John B. Hogenesch; Phillip L. Lowrey; Joseph S. Takahashi

Genetic and molecular approaches have been critical for elucidating the mechanism of the mammalian circadian clock. Here, we demonstrate that the ClockΔ19 mutant behavioral phenotype is significantly modified by mouse strain genetic background. We map a suppressor of the ClockΔ19 mutation to a ∼900 kb interval on mouse chromosome 1 and identify the transcription factor, Usf1, as the responsible gene. A SNP in the promoter of Usf1 causes elevation of its transcript and protein in strains that suppress the Clock mutant phenotype. USF1 competes with the CLOCK:BMAL1 complex for binding to E-box sites in target genes. Saturation binding experiments demonstrate reduced affinity of the CLOCKΔ19:BMAL1 complex for E-box sites, thereby permitting increased USF1 occupancy on a genome-wide basis. We propose that USF1 is an important modulator of molecular and behavioral circadian rhythms in mammals. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00426.001


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Genetic suppression of the circadian Clock mutation by the melatonin biosynthesis pathway

Kazuhiro Shimomura; Phillip L. Lowrey; Martha Hotz Vitaterna; Ethan D. Buhr; Vivek Kumar; Peter Hanna; Chiaki Omura; Mariko Izumo; Sharon S. Low; R. Keith Barrett; Silvia I. LaRue; Carla B. Green; Joseph S. Takahashi

Most laboratory mouse strains including C57BL/6J do not produce detectable levels of pineal melatonin owing to deficits in enzymatic activity of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) and N-acetylserotonin O-methyl transferase (ASMT), two enzymes necessary for melatonin biosynthesis. Here we report that alleles segregating at these two loci in C3H/HeJ mice, an inbred strain producing melatonin, suppress the circadian period-lengthening effect of the Clock mutation. Through a functional mapping approach, we localize mouse Asmt to chromosome X and show that it, and the Aanat locus on chromosome 11, are significantly associated with pineal melatonin levels. Treatment of suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) explant cultures from Period2Luciferase (Per2Luc) Clock/+ reporter mice with melatonin, or the melatonin agonist, ramelteon, phenocopies the genetic suppression of the Clock mutant phenotype observed in living animals. These results demonstrate that melatonin suppresses the Clock/+ mutant phenotype and interacts with Clock to affect the mammalian circadian system.

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Joseph S. Takahashi

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Chiaki Omura

Northwestern University

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Choogon Lee

Florida State University

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