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Nobel Prize

Circadian rhythm pioneers win 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash, and Michael W. Young share top honor for discovering the mechanisms that control our biological clock

by Celia Henry Arnaud
October 2, 2017

Organisms’ biological clocks are controlled by oscillations in the level of PER, a protein encoded by the period gene. When complexed with the TIMELESS protein (TIM), PER accumulates in the nucleus, where it inhibits period gene activity. This negative feedback mechanism underlies the circadian rhythm.
Credit: Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet
Organisms’ biological clocks are controlled by oscillations in the level of PER, a protein produced from the period gene (1). When complexed with the TIMELESS protein, or TIM (2), PER accumulates in the nucleus, where it inhibits period gene activity (3).

The 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash, and Michael W. Young for their pioneering efforts to elucidate the molecular mechanisms that drive organisms’ inner biological clocks. The prize, which is worth approximately $1.1 million, will be split equally among the three winners.

Biological clocks, which allow organisms to adapt to the daily light cycles associated with Earth’s rotation, control many biological functions, including hormone levels, sleep, body temperature, and metabolism. In humans, temporary disruption of these 24-hour circadian clocks as a result of travel causes jet lag. Chronic disruptions, such as those experienced by people who work night shifts, can lead to increased risk of various diseases. Scientists are now looking to improve treatment of cardiovascular and other diseases by coordinating delivery of drugs with a patient’s clock.

Hall, Rosbash, Young
Photos of Hall, Rosbash, Young
Credit: Credit: Chinese University of Hong Kong, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Mario Margado/Rockefeller University

This year’s “laureates unraveled the first, coherent molecular mechanism for a circadian clock and unquestionably led this field,” says Andrew Millar, who studies biological clocks at the University of Edinburgh.

In 1984, Hall and Rosbash, collaborating at Brandeis University, and Young, at Rockefeller University, independently isolated a gene in fruit flies that controls daily biological rhythm. This gene, called period, encodes a protein called PER, whose amounts peak at night and decline during the day.

Young discovered genes that encode other proteins involved in regulating PER’s cyclic production in cells. The Timeless protein binds to PER and helps shuttle it from a cell’s cytoplasm into its nucleus, where it can inhibit the expression of the period gene. The Doubletime protein is a kinase that phosphorylates PER to increase its degradation and thereby slow its accumulation, helping keep the 24-hour clock on time.

“The fundamental discoveries of how the circadian clock regulates the daily cycles of human physiology have important implications for pharmaceutical drug development,” says Timothy Willson, a research professor at the Eshelman School of Pharmacy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who advocated incorporating circadian clocks in drug discovery when he worked in the pharmaceutical industry. “The efficacy, toxicity, and metabolism of drugs can be influenced by the clock, providing opportunities to optimize time and frequency of dosing of new and existing drugs.” Unfortunately, he says, the pharmaceutical industry is not yet fully harnessing the knowledge of circadian clocks during drug development.

All the circadian clock proteins are shared in eukaryotic organisms from fruit flies to humans. But they are not universal: Cyanobacteria have a different kind of internal clock that depends on sequential protein phosphorylation.

“Circadian clocks are nearly ubiquitous among more complex, eukaryotic cells but apparently not among prokaryotes,” Edinburgh’s Millar says. “It’s possible that there are other, still broader, principles to discover which govern the temporal organization of all cells.”


Related stories:
C&EN talks with Akhilesh Reddy, a champion of chronopharmacology
Picking Apart Our Circadian Clock
Driving The Circadian Clock


NOTE: This story was updated on Oct. 5, 2017, to include new information.

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