1. Academic Validation
  2. CRY1 Lysine 151 Regulates Circadian Rhythms Through Ubiquitination-Independent Protein Interactions

CRY1 Lysine 151 Regulates Circadian Rhythms Through Ubiquitination-Independent Protein Interactions

  • Int J Mol Sci. 2025 Aug 18;26(16):7962. doi: 10.3390/ijms26167962.
Jiawen Peng 1 Na Liu 1 Yixuan Ren 1 Jiahui Wang 1 Yanxia Jin 1 Xianping Wang 1 Weidong Wang 1 Jicheng Pan 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Hubei Key Laboratory of Edible Wild Plants Conservation and Utilization, College of Life Sciences, Hubei Normal University, Huangshi 435002, China.
Abstract

Mammalian circadian rhythms, governing ~24 h oscillations in behavior, physiology, and hormone levels, are orchestrated by transcriptional-translational feedback loops centered around the core clock protein Cryptochrome 1 (CRY1). While CRY1 ubiquitination is known to regulate clock function, the roles of specific ubiquitination sites remain unclear. Here, we identify lysine 151 (K151) as a critical residue modulating the circadian period through non-canonical mechanisms. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we generated CRY1-K151Q/R mutants mimicking constitutive deubiquitination. Circadian rescue assays in Cry1/2-deficient cells revealed period shortening (K151Q: -2.25 h; K151R: -1.4 h; n = 3, p < 0.01, Student's t-test), demonstrating K151's functional importance. Despite normal nuclear localization kinetics, K151Q/R mutants exhibited reduced transcriptional repression in luciferase assays, a weakened interaction with BMAL1 by the luciferase complementation assay, and enhanced binding to E3 Ligase FBXL12 (but not FBXL3) while showing more stability than wild-type CRY1. Notably, the absence of ubiquitination-linked degradation or altered FBXL3 engagement suggests a ubiquitination-independent mechanism. We propose that CRY1-K151 serves as a structural hub fine-tuning circadian periodicity by modulating core clock protein interactions rather than through traditional ubiquitin-mediated turnover. These findings redefine the mechanistic landscape of post-translational clock regulation and offer new therapeutic avenues for circadian disorders.

Keywords

circadian clock; cryptochrome 1; protein interactions; ubiquitination-independent.

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