Abstract
Liver metabolism undergoes robust circadian oscillations in gene expression and enzymatic activity essential for liver homeostasis, but whether the circadian clock controls homeostatic self-renewal of hepatocytes is unknown. Here we show that hepatocyte polyploidization is markedly accelerated around the central vein, the site of permanent cell self-renewal, in mice deficient in circadian Period genes. In these mice, a massive accumulation of hyperpolyploid mononuclear and binuclear hepatocytes occurs due to impaired mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase 1 (Mkp1)-mediated circadian modulation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (Erk1/2) activity. Time-lapse imaging of hepatocytes suggests that the reduced activity of Erk1/2 in the midbody during cytokinesis results in abscission failure, leading to polyploidization. Manipulation of Mkp1 phosphatase activity is sufficient to change the ploidy level of hepatocytes. These data provide clear evidence that the Period genes not only orchestrate dynamic changes in metabolic activity, but also regulate homeostatic self-renewal of hepatocytes through Mkp1-Erk1/2 signaling pathway.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Time is an integral part of our life. Most organisms on Earth show daily cycles of physiology and behavior in harmony with light-dark cycles in the environment. Endogenous time is generated by a self-sustained molecular oscillator composed of a transcriptional–posttranscriptional feedback loop in which clock genes regulate their own transcription1,2,3. This core oscillator couples to cell metabolism and maintains proper rhythms in endocrine and metabolic pathways required for organismal homeostasis. Liver is particularly important as a central organ for glucose, lipids and nucleotides metabolism in the body4,5,6. The circadian clock rhythmically regulates genomic and epigenetic processes to anticipate and adapt to cycles of feeding/nutrition that have dramatic consequences on metabolic activity7,8.
Since liver is the primary organ to which all nutrients and toxins are conveyed from the intestine via portal vessels, homeostatic renewal of hepatocytes is essential for its maintenance. Renewal occurs steadily and continuously, all hepatocytes being completely replaced within 2 years9. Genetic tracing studies provide evidence that homeostatic renewal operates via mature hepatocytes self-replication10,11, fueled possibly by recently identified axin2+ stem cells located around the central vein of the hepatic lobule12, and by Lgr5+ stem cells in neighboring region of the portal vessels13,14. However, the circadian mechanism underlying the homeostatic cell renewal is totally unknown, unlike the relatively well established mechanism of metabolism regulation by the clock7.
Here, we investigated the role of the circadian clock in homeostatic renewal of hepatocytes by generating Period deficient (Per-null) mice, which lack all three Period gene homologs (Per1, Per2, and Per3). Period genes function as the central cogs of the circadian clock1,2,15. We discovered that the arrhythmic Per-null liver is characterized by massively accelerated hepatocytes polyploidization (average 16n to 32n) in midlobular to centrilobular regions surrounding the central vein, where the permanent renewal of cells occurs12.
Cells usually contain two pairs of chromosomes (2n, diploid) but can sometimes have higher ploidy levels16,17. In general, eukaryotic organisms prefer a diploid complement of chromosome as it enables sexual reproduction and genetic recombination, but polyploidy is surprisingly common in nature, especially in plants, fungi, insects, fishes and amphibians18. In comparison, higher vertebrates do not appear to tolerate polyploidy very well, such that germline polyploidy drives embryonic lethality and accounts for 10% of spontaneous abortions in humans19,20. Somatic polyploidy, however, commonly occurs in specific tissues, and hepatocytes have been extensively studied as a model of polyploidy over 100 years21. Hepatocyte polyploidy is age-dependent22,23 and is commonly observed across mammalian species24. In recent years, several factors including E2F1/7/825, insulin26 and miR-12227, have been reported to regulate hepatic polyploidy during liver development. However, why and how hepatocytes develop polyploidy is still a mystery waiting for further work in addressing this remarkable biological phenomenon.
By analyzing the over-polyploid liver of Per-null mice in vivo and in vitro, we found that the absence of Periods causes constantly high levels of the mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase 1 (Mkp1). Increased Mkp1 activity in self-renewing hepatocytes in turn inactivates the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (Erk1/2) in the midbody during cytokinesis, resulting in abscission failure, ultimately leading to increased polyploidization. These findings indicate that the circadian clock genes not only orchestrate daily metabolic changes in hepatocytes, but also regulate homeostatic hepatocyte self-renewal through Mkp1-pErk1/2 signaling pathway.
Results
Over-polyploid hepatocytes in Per-null mice
We generated Per-null mice by crossing Per1-knockout28, Per2 Brdm1-mutant29, and Per3 knockout30 mice (Supplementary Fig. 1a). As expected, Per-null mice completely lack circadian locomotor, eating and drinking rhythms in constant darkness, whereas day-night rhythms were observed under light-dark (LD) cycles (Supplementary Fig. 1b) due to the masking effect of the environmental lighting cycle. Per-null mice did not show any prominent abnormality in development when fed a normal diet under standard LD cycles (Supplementary Fig. 1c,d).
We performed a systemic histological survey of tissue morphology by comparing a series of conventional hematoxylin/eosin (HE)-stained sections from brain, lung, heart, kidney, liver, intestine, colon, pancreas, spleen, adrenal, testis, and skin samples from Per-null mice with those from wild-type (WT) mice (Supplementary Fig. 2). Among all tissues examined, a marked difference between genotypes was found only in the morphology of the liver with the appearance of macronucleated hepatocytes in Per-null liver (Fig. 1a,b).
This increase in nuclear size was zone-specific in Per-null liver: enlarged cells with a giant nucleus accumulated round the central vein (CV) but were rare around portal vessels (PV) in hepatic lobules (Fig. 1c). The analyses of the zonal distribution of polyploid cells in hepatic lobules using alternative histological criteria31,32 found that the acceleration of polyploidization occurred in hepatic layers closer to the CV (3–9 out of 15 subdivisions) excluding its nearest layers (1–2) (Fig. 1d). According to the classical zonation of hepatocyte lobules, these cells locate in the centrilobular or midlobular zones, and thus, we describe these cells as centro-midlobular hepatocytes (CMH), distinct from PH (periportal hepatocytes).
Further analysis verified that Per-null liver had larger CMH nuclei (>100 μm2) compared to WT, for both mononucleated and binucleated cells (Fig. 1e), but PH were not significantly different (Fig. 1f). Developmentally, the genotype difference of enlarged nuclear size in CMH became gradually evident around 4–6 weeks of age in Per-null mice (Fig. 1g). By using flow cytometry, we found that the increased nuclear size was accompanied by increased ploidy levels: already at 3 weeks of age, Per-null liver was mostly populated with tetraploid (4n) hepatocytes (Fig. 1h, i), while diploid (2n) hepatocytes were predominant in WT. At 12 weeks of age, polyploidy of Per-null hepatocytes progressed further, with a main 8n population among 16n and 32n hepatocytes, while WT hepatocytes remained at 4n (Fig. 1i). These observations clearly demonstrate that polyploidy is markedly accelerated in hepatocytes in Per-null mice.
Since an increase in liver polyploidy can originate from the accumulation of mononuclear hepatocytes with polyploid nucleus (i.e. nuclear ploidy) and/or that of binuclear cells (cellular ploidy)33,34, we sought to refine our analysis. Cytometrical analysis of liver sections by β-catenin/Hoechst-33342 immunohistochemistry, quantifying nuclear size and number per cell, revealed that both nuclear and cellular polyploidization are accelerated in Per-null CMH, characterized by a highly significant increase in 8n binuclear (2 × 8n) cells as well as 16n mononuclear hepatocytes in the centrilobular zone (Fig. 2a–e). The developmental onset of binucleation and polyploidization coincides, observable by 6 weeks of age to become significant by 8 weeks (Fig. 2f), suggesting their etiology is developmentally connected.
To identify which Period gene mostly dictates polyploidy, we examined hepatocytes in single and double knockout mice, and found that CMH from Per1 −/−, Per2 Brdm1/Brdm1, Per3 −/−, and Per1 −/−;Per2 Brdm1/Brdm1 mice all showed intermediate nuclear size between those of Per-null and WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 3a,b). It is noteworthy that PH did not show any difference in all genotypes (Supplementary Fig. 3c). These findings indicate all three Period genes contribute to increased zone-specific polyploidization in hepatocytes.
Abscission failure in Per-null hepatocytes
Polyploid cells can arise from three general mechanisms, (i) cell fusion, (ii) cell development program known as endoreplication, and (iii) cell defects that can induce an abortive cell cycle16. Polyploidy in hepatocytes is thought to result of the third mechanism33,34. We thus analyzed the entire course of cell division by time-lapse microscopy using cultures of primary hepatocytes from Per-null mice of 3 weeks of age, when polyploidy starts to develop (Fig. 3a,b and Supplementary Fig. 4a-d, Supplementary Movie 1). In both Per-null and control WT hepatocytes, mitosis successfully proceeded with no apparent abnormality, and no differences were observed in cytokinesis until the contractile ring formation (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 4e). In contrast, we observed a defect at the very last step of cytokinesis in Per-null hepatocytes: the separation between the two daughter cells (abscission) did not succeed, and instead the nascent daughter cells, still connected by their cleavage furrow, fused back together to form a binuclear cell (Fig. 3b). This abscission failure was rarely found in WT (5.30%: 28 cases among 526 hepatocytes), but dramatically increased in Per-null liver (17.5%: 126 cases among 717 hepatocytes) (Fig. 3c and Supplementary Fig. 4f).
While abscission failure can understandably produce multinucleated cells, it is unclear whether it can also produce cells with a single macronucleus. After abscission failure, cultured Per-null hepatocytes were continuously traced (Supplementary Fig. 4g), leading to the observation of a cell with a single 4n nucleus developing into an 8n after abscission failure (see Supplementary Movie 2). First, the cell with a 4n (based on Hoechst staining) nucleus entered into S-phase to become 8n, then progressed to M-phase but failed abscission, resulting in a binuclear hepatocyte (4n × 2). This cell then started a second S-phase (8n × 2), went into a second M-phase with both nuclei fusing, performed cytokinesis successfully, and then became two mononucleated hepatocytes each with a single enlarged nucleus (8n × 1; 2 cells). Thus, two cell cycles, the first failing abscission to produce binuclear cells, lead to polyploid hepatocytes with a single enlarged polyploid nucleus (Supplementary Fig. 4g, Supplementary Movie 2). A similar mechanism has been previously reported to occur in insulin-induced polyploidization26,35. Occurrence of abscission failure in Per-null hepatocytes regardless of the previous ploidy level (inferred by nuclear size) suggests that this abscission failure is the cause of the extraordinary polyploidization observed in vivo (2 × 8n, 1 × 16n, 1 × 32n).
pErk1/2 is downregulated in Per-null mice
We next proceeded to identify a potential molecular mechanism underlying the abscission failure and polyploidization in Per-null hepatocytes. We first checked the insulin signaling cascade in WT and Per-null cultured hepatocytes, since it has been implicated in weaning-evoked hepatocyte tetrapolidization26 (Supplementary Fig. 5a). Interestingly, we found that phosphorylation of MAP kinase (Erk1/2) was significantly decreased in Per-null hepatocytes (Supplementary Fig. 5b,c). We then examined phosphorylated Erk1/2 (pErk1/2) across circadian time in vivo in WT and Per-null liver (Fig. 4a), and found consistently low levels of pErk1/2 in Per-null compared to WT at all timepoints. WT liver showed a clear circadian rhythm, with a peak at CT0-CT4 and a trough at CT12-CT16, consistent with previous studies36. To localize the histological origin of this rhythm, we next performed pErk1/2 immunohistochemistry and found a robust oscillation specifically in WT CMH (Fig. 4b), except in pericentral stem cells (Supplementary Fig. 6a–e). pErk1/2 began to rise at CT20 in the cytosol, peaked at CT0/CT4 in the whole cell but intense in the nucleus, and declined at CT8 to CT12/CT16 (Fig. 4b, higher magnification). On the other hand, it is important to note that we never observed clear pErk1/2-positive staining in Per-null liver (Fig. 4b), indicating the loss of the circadian pErk1/2 activity in the CMH of Per-null mice. The sublobular distribution of pErk1/2-positive cells in WT (Fig. 4b and Supplementary Fig. 6c) overlaps with that of over-polyploid cells in Per-null liver (Fig. 1c), where cell proliferation also occurs even in adults (Supplementary Fig. 6e–h; also see the Supplementary discussions for Supplementary Fig. 6), although at much lower rate than in developing liver in both WT and Per-null mice (Supplementary Fig. 6i). These data suggest that low pErk1/2 activity in CMH is involved in polyploidy formation of Per-null mice.
To gain insight on the role of pErk1/2 in polyploidy development, we next examined the subcellular localization of pErk1/2 during abscission and found that pErk1/2 was concentrated in the midbody (Fig. 4c). Notably, in Per-null hepatocytes, the intensity of pErk1/2 at the midbody was significantly decreased, and relatively longer intercellular bridges between daughter cells were observed (Fig. 4c, d). To test a causal relationship between depletion of pErk1/2 at the midbody and abscission failure in Per-null hepatocytes, we pharmacologically inhibited phosphorylation of Erk1/2 with the Mek inhibitor U012637 in cultured WT hepatocytes. We observed longer intercellular bridges extending from the midbody in U0126-treated WT hepatocytes, comparable to Per-null hepatocytes (Fig. 4c, d). Moreover, time-lapse image analysis demonstrated that U0126 could dose-dependently increase the ratio of abscission failure in WT hepatocytes (Fig. 4e). Altogether with a report on Hela cells showing that inactivation of Erk1/2 inhibits disconnection of daughter cells during abscission38, our results support the conclusion that abscission failure of Per-null hepatocytes is caused at least in part by pErk1/2 depletion.
Constant upregulation of Mkp1 in Per-null mice
We next examine the mechanisms of the downregulation of pErk1/2 in Per-null liver. This is likely to arise from a decrease in kinase activity and/or an increase in phosphatase activity. Mek1/2 are known dominant kinases phosphorylating Erk1/2, but we observed neither daily rhythms nor reduction of their amounts in Per-null liver, at mRNA (Supplementary Fig. 7a), protein, or phosphorylation levels (Supplementary Fig. 7b). On the other hand, by screening Map kinase phosphatase (Mkp) family genes expressed in the liver by quantitative RT-PCR (Supplementary Fig. 7c), we found that only Mkp1 showed daily changes in WT and was constantly upregulated in Per-null mice. Since two independent earlier reports36,39 also showed diurnal rhythm of Mkp1, we decided to perform further characterization of the circadian expression of Mkp1 in the liver of both genotypes.
In WT, hepatic Mkp1 mRNA showed a robust rhythm with a peak at CT12 and a trough at CT0, but constantly high at all times in Per-null (Fig. 5a). In line with this transcript rhythm, Mkp1 protein levels fluctuate in a circadian fashion with a peak at CT12 and a trough at CT0 in WT, and constantly high in Per-null mice (Fig. 5b). Based on the observed negative correlations between Mkp1 and pErk1/2 abundance in WT and Per-null mice (Fig. 5b), published genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) data for Clock and Bmal140,41 (Supplementary Fig. 8), and a ChIP qPCR assay that demonstrated the circadian time-specific recruitment of Per1 to the E-box enhancer element in the Mkp1 promoter (Fig. 5c), we propose that the clock gene-controlled protein Mkp1 regulates phosphorylation of Erk1/2 in the liver.
Mkp1 regulates the abscission failure and polyploidy
To address whether the elevated Mkp1 expression is involved in abscission failure in Per-null mice, we treated Per-null hepatocyte cultures with BCI (CID 6419844/CHEMBL1241589)42 (Supplementary Fig. 9a), an allosteric inhibitor of Mkp1, and found that the high incidence of abscission failures normally observed in these cells was dose-dependently decreased (Fig. 5d). Furthermore, to verify the specific effect of Mkp1 on abscission, we infected WT hepatocytes with lentiviral expression vectors driving Mkp1 overexpression (Supplementary Fig. 9b, c). We found that hepatocytes overexpressing Mkp1 tended to maintain intercellular bridges for a longer time during abscission and showed an increased abscission failure ratio (Fig. 5e, f and Supplementary 9d; see also Supplementary Movie 3). These findings demonstrate that the clock-controlled Mkp1 regulates the abscission of hepatocytes via pErk1/2 in the midbody.
Since these findings strongly suggest that polyploidy level is controlled by the Mkp1-pErk1/2 signal pathway, we directly challenged this hypothesis by pharmacological manipulations. When we applied U0126 to inhibit phosphorylation of Erk1/2, the nuclear size of WT hepatocytes was dramatically increased (Fig. 6). In contrast, when we applied BCI, the nuclear size of Per-null hepatocytes was decreased to a level comparable to WT (Fig. 6). These data demonstrate that nuclear ploidy can be controlled by manipulating the Mkp1-pErk1/2 pathway.
Discussion
Cells with more than two paired sets of chromosomes are referred to as polyploid cells. These cells arise from normal diploid cells through yet unknown mechanisms. A paucity of animal models has so far hampered molecular characterization of cell polyploidization in mammals. In the course of a histological survey of the Period deficient mice, we found a massive accumulation of polyploid cells in their liver. Centrilobular hepatocytes exhibit particularly high ploidy levels, 8n, 16n, and 32n. Our molecular characterization revealed that the absence of Periods impairs the Mkp1-mediated circadian control of the phospho-Erk1/2 activity. Impaired Erk1/2 activity in the midbody during cytokinesis leads to abscission failure of self-renewing mature hepatocytes, and this eventually enhances polyploidy. Our work therefore unmasked a role for a clock-controlled Mkp1-mediated Erk1/2 pathway in hepatocyte cytokinesis and polyploidization.
Mkp1 is a founding member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase (MKP) family, expressed in many tissues and involved in a variety of functions by regulating the activity of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK)43. The MAPK pathway conveys signals from cell surface receptors to the genome, and regulates fundamental cellular processes such as proliferation, differentiation, motility, stress response, apoptosis, and survival43. Mkp1 is an immediate early gene expressed in many tissues, with roles in both innate and adaptive immunity44 and in lipid metabolism45 and obesity in mice46 and humans47. Here our data provide evidence that circadian oscillatory gene Periods are active in proliferating hepatocytes and involved in governing the abscission step of cytokinesis by regulating Mkp1 which inactivates pErk1/2 in the midbody. These findings open a new dimension of clock gene function in cell biology: intracellular clock components directly regulate cytokinesis, and Periods ablation results in abscission failure through circadian dysregulation of Mkp1.
The midbody is indispensable for completing abscission48. The midbody (or Flemming body) is a transient structure, containing bundles of microtubules derived from the mitotic spindle, found in mammalian cells and present near the end of cytokinesis, just prior to the complete separation of the dividing cells. Aside from microtubules, the midbody also contains various proteins involved in cytokinesis, asymmetric cell division, and chromosome segregation. Erk activation plays an important role for the disconnection of intercellular bridges between daughter cells at midbody, since the pErk1/2 inhibition by U0126 activates Aurora-B-dependent abscission checkpoint, which inhibits the abscission processes49 through activation of endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT)50. We observed phosphorylation of Aurora B at Thr232 with decrease of pErk1/2 in liver in vivo of Per-null mice (unpublished observation), which suggests that the persistent activation of Aurora B in Per-null mice stabilizes intercellular canals, and thereby prevents the completion of abscission.
The identification of the Mkp1-pErk1/2 pathway involvement in cytokinesis enabled us to manipulate polyploid states pharmacologically: pErk inhibition by U0126 increased the nuclear size of WT hepatocytes, and Mkp inhibition by BCI reduced the nuclear size of Per-null hepatocytes to a level comparable to that of WT nuclei (Fig. 6). This may be invaluable as a tool to investigate the molecular mechanism of polyploidization induced by oxidative stress and chemical-induced DNA damage51, and during cell cycle disruption25,52, and to further the biological significance of polyploidy that accompanies aging23, inflammation53 and tumorigenesis54,55.
Dysregulation of circadian rhythm is likely to accelerate malignant transformation of various cells as reported previously in malignant lymphoma54 and breast cancer35. Of particular interest is the fact that mitosis of polyploid hepatocytes has been tied to aneuploidy16,56, which arises through mitotic defects, chromosome missegregation, or chromosome catastrophe, and may give rise to hepatocellular carcinoma. However, we found no obvious aneuploid “population” either in WT or in Per-null hepatocytes in our flow cytometric analysis as shown in Fig. 1h. Furthermore, we found none of the Per-null mice harbors hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) until 6 months of age. Fu and colleagues recently demonstrated that chronic jet-lag increased incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in a recent paper57 in both wild-type and clock gene-disrupted mice. However, according to their report, HCC was observed at aged mice: even the youngest mouse bearing HCC was 10 months old. Thus, our observations in Per-null mice probably indicate that additional environmental events and/or aging, accompanied by genetic/epigenetic alterations, are required for carcinogenesis in the liver.
Hepatic polyploidization occurs mainly during liver development. In rodents, hepatocytes are exclusively diploid (2n) in neonates, polyploidization starting after weaning. Up to 90% of rat/mouse hepatocytes become polyploid at adult age24,58. The current view in the field concerning the induction of developmentally programmed liver cell polyploidization is that during weaning of mice, hepatocytes become first binucleated (cellular ploidy 2 × 2n) through a cytokinesis failure. Subsequently when a binucleated cell (2 × 2n) enters another cell cycle and replicates its DNA and progress normally through mitosis and cytokinesis, two daughter cells are formed each containing a single enlarged nucleus (4n, nuclear ploidy). Thus, nuclear ploidy can be a consequence of cellular ploidy. This idea is in accordance with previous observations by Desdouets59 that in wild-type mice after weaning, first binucleated hepatocytes appear in the liver, followed afterwards by mononucleated polyploid hepatocytes. Here we have demonstrated that this developmentally programmed polyploidization is accelerated in mice with deleted Period genes, resulting in the formation of more binucleated cells and mononucleated polyploid cells.
However, there is also some evidence that mononucleated polyploid hepatocytes may be derived directly from mononucleated diploid cells through a process called endoreplication16,60. Cells replicate their DNA without subsequent mitosis, so they progress through G1-S-G2 and back to G1 again. However, in our case of Per-null induced polyploidy, we cannot observe endoreplication during live cell imaging of hepatocyte culture: namely we cannot observe any instance showing the increase of nuclear size without progressing through mitosis. Endoreplication of hepatocytes has been described more under pathological conditions60 such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or liver cancer.
The developmentally-regulated hepatocyte polyploidization is associated with high growth and high metabolic rate during the weaning period24,26. For example, hepatocyte polyploidization is increased in mice derived from small litters, where pups experience less competition and grow faster. Moreover, hepatocyte polyploidization is accelerated when the growth rate is stimulated by treating mice with triiodothyronine25, growth hormone24,61, or insulin26 in contrast to the low rate of polyploidy in diet restriction62, after thyroidectomy61 and hypophyseactomy24,61. Interestingly, binuclear formation, which precedes mononuclear polyploidization, is delayed when weaning is delayed63. In addition to these developmental metabolic demands, the liver is exposed to circadian variation of absorbed foods from the intestine, which have profound impact on liver metabolism. It is known that Wee1 kinase, which phosphorylates and thereby inactivates the CDC2/Cyclin B1 complex to inhibit G2/M transition, is regulated by the clock64,65, and is activated at dawn. These studies suggest that liver cells are actively differentiated in response to metabolic demand, and polyploidization is stimulated when energetic demands for proliferation compete with energetic requirements for differentiation in response to weaning or circadian cycles.
In conclusion, our study demonstrates that the Mkp1-pErk1/2 pathway is rhythmically activated in mature CMH hepatocytes predisposed to develop polyploidy and plays a critical role in the abscission into daughter cells. However, it should be kept in mind that cytokinesis is a complex phenomenon: in the abscission stage alone, dozens of regulators were identified50, the Per-Mkp1-pErk1/2 pathway described here being only one among many causes of cytokinesis failure. Nonetheless, unmasking the molecular pathway underlying polyploidy sheds new light on the role of the clock in the day-to-day maintenance of liver mass.
Methods
Experimental animals
All mice used for experiments were standard BALB/c strain with at least 10 times backcross breeding. Mice were maintained in 12-h light (~200 lux fluorescent light)/12-h dark cycle (LD) with food and water ad libitum. Before the analysis, mice were placed into an isolated light-dark box with LD cycles for at least 2 weeks to synchronize their circadian clock to the ambient light-dark cycle. Locomotor activity was recorded every 5 min with passive infrared sensor (Omron) and analyzed with Clocklab software (Actimetrics). To eliminate influence of external light on the internal clock of liver, in all experiments for circadian rhythmicity analysis, mice were exposed to constant darkness (DD) for 48 h before they were killed. Time is expressed as zeitgeber time (ZT), with ZT12 defined as the time of lights off in LD conditions, or circadian time (CT), with CT12 defined as the onset of locomotor activity in DD. To avoid the circadian influences to our data, 10–15 weeks old mice were used and killed at ZT8 for all experiments excluding special case of nuclear size measurement and hepatocytes primary culture. For nuclear size measurement at different developmental time, 2–20 weeks old mice were used for examination of nuclear size at indicated developmental stages, whereas, for hepatocytes primary culture, 21–25 days old mice were used. All animal experiments were approved by the animal experimentation committee of Kyoto University.
Immunohistochemistry and measurement of nuclear size
Specimens were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and embedded in paraffin-wax with standard protocol. Five-micrometer-thick sections were deparaffinized with xylene and ethanol and then antigen-retrieved by pressure cooking in Tris–EDTA buffer (pH 9.0) for 5 min, as described66. Sections were immersed in PBS containing 0.2% Triton X-100. For diaminobenzidine (DAB) labeling, sections were treated with 3% hydrogen peroxide for 30 min. Before blocking with 5% BSA and 5% FBS in PBS for 1 h, sections were treated with Super Block (ScyTek Lab) for 10 min and washed with PBS. Primary antibodies to β-Catenin (Cell Signaling, 9582), Ki67 (Abcam, ab16667), and phospho-Erk1/2 (Cell Signaling, 9101) were diluted in PBS containing 1% BSA, 1% FBS, and 0.1% Triton X-100. Following overnight incubations at 4 °C, sections were washed extensively with PBS containing 0.3% Tween 20 and incubated with secondary antibodies conjugated with biotin (1:500, Vector Labs) or Alexa fluorophores (1:500, Invitrogen) with the same condition as the primary antibody. For DAB labeling, sections were incubated with a pre-formed biotin-avidin-horseradish peroxidase complex (1:500, Vector Labs) at room temperature for 60 min, followed by wash with PBS in 0.3% Tween 20 and 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) for 5 min twice sequentially at room temperature. Development of DAB was performed by incubation with 0.02% DAB (Wako) solution (0.02% DAB in 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4 with 0.001% H2O2) at room temperature for 5 to 10 min. Sections were mounted with entellan (Merck) after dehydration. For immunofluorescence labeling, sections were incubated with Hoechst-33342 (Molecule Probe) to mark the nuclei. Sections were mounted in Prolong Gold mounting medium with anti-fade reagent (Invitrogen) for image acquisition. For evaluation of sizes of nuclei and cells, Hoechst 33342 labeling and anti-β-catenin antibody staining were applied to outline nuclear and cellular morphology, respectively. Images were acquired by fluorescent microscope (Carl Zeiss, Axio Imager M2) equipped with 20X/ 0.3 EC Plan Neofluar objective and AxioCam MRm CCD camera on the resolution with 1388 × 1040 pixel. Images were subjected to ImageJ for nuclear and cell size quantification. For nuclear size measurement, the nuclei with round or oval morphology were analyzed. For the cell size measurement, only cells with round or oval nuclei were analyzed. Cell size was measured according to β-catenin signal. Data were obtained from three to five mice for each group. For quantification, at least five different fields of the microscope were selected randomly from each mouse liver. Approximately 1500 to 3000 hepatocytes were analyzed for each animal. Mono- and binucleated hepatocytes were distinguished by comparing Hoechst-33342 and membrane-labeling images.
Hepatocyte primary culture
Primary mouse hepatocytes were isolated from 3-week-old mouse livers using a two-step collagenase I perfusion protocol59,67,68. Briefly, liver was perfused with Ca2+ and Mg2+ free Hank’s balanced salt solution (HBSS) from inferior vein with a flow rate of 5 ml per minute for 5 min. An incision was made in the portal vein to let blood out of the liver. Liver was then perfused with 300 μg/ml collagenase I (Worthington Biochemical Corporation) in HBSS (Gibco) with a flow rate of 3 ml per minute for 15 min. After perfusion, liver was disrupted with scissors and dissociated by pipetting gently in 199 medium with 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS). Cell suspension was filtered through a cell strainer (100 μm2) and mixed with equal volume of 90% Percoll (Sigma) in HBSS. To collect live hepatocytes, the mixture was centrifuged at 100 × g for 5 min, and the pellet was resuspended in 199 medium (Gibco) containing 5% FBS. Approximately 4 × 105 isolated hepatocytes were seeded on collagen-coated dishes (BD Falcon, 35 mm) and incubated at 37 °C with 5% CO2. Medium was refreshed after 4 h of seeding. After 24 h of seeding, medium was replaced by 199 medium containing 10 mM HEPES (Gibco), 4.5 mg/ml glucose, 2 mM L-glutamine (Invitrogen), antibiotic-antimycotic (Gibco), 1 mM sodium-pyruvate (Gibco), 5 ng/ml sodium selenite (Sigma), 5 mM nicotinamide, 10 μg/ml transferrin (Sigma), 10 μM 3,39,5-triiodo-L-thyronine sodium salt (Sigma), 50 ng/ml recombinant mouse EGF (Invitrogen), 1μg/ml insulin (Sigma), 100 nM dexamethasone (Sigma), and 5% FBS. Medium was refreshed every 24 h throughout the culture time.
Time-lapse recording
The cytokinetic structures of hepatocytes were monitored in vitro by time-lapse microscopy (Carl Zeiss). Primary cultured hepatocytes isolated from the livers of 3-week-old mice were used since the proliferation ability of hepatocytes at this age is most vigorous and over 90% of hepatocytes are diploid and tetraploid (Fig. 1h,i). 24 h after seeding, images of hepatocytes were recorded live with a high resolution wide field inverted microscope Axio Observer Z1 system (Carl Zeiss). Cellular structures were visualized by phase contrast system with A-Plan 10 × / 0.25 dry objective lens and automatic exposure time. Hepatocytes were incubated in a chamber maintained at 37 °C and 5% CO2 (CO2/Temp Module S, Carl Zeiss). Images were taken at 10 min intervals for approximately 120 h by AxioCam MRm CCD camera. The optimal focal plane was set at beginning of each image session and adjusted by Definite Focus system with 10-s intervals throughout the image recording. The recorded images were analyzed via ImageJ software.
Drug treatment of hepatocytes in culture
Hepatocytes were treated with 20 μM U0126 (Promega) or 8 μM DUSP1/6 inhibitor/BCI (EMD Millipore) after 50 h of seeding for time-lapse recording. Culture medium with indicated inhibitor was refreshed every 24 h during cell recording. For analysis of the intensity of phospho-Erk1/2 in primary hepatocytes, 20 μM U0126 or 8 μM BCI was applied after 50 h of seeding, and cells were fixed after 10 to 15 h of drug treatment. For quantification of nuclear size of primary hepatocytes, 20 μM U0126 or BCI was applied after 50 h of seeding, and cells were fixed after 0 h or 46 h of drug treatment. For the group with 46 h drug treatment, culture medium with indicated drugs was refreshed every 24 h.
Lentivirus infection in primary hepatocyte culture
Mkp1 cDNA was amplified from liver cDNA by designed primer pairs (Mkp1 cDNA forward primer, 5′-GCAGAATTCATGGTGATGGAGGTGG-3′; Mkp1 cDNA reverse primer, 5′-GCTGCGGCCGCTCAGCAGCTTGGAGA-3′) and sub-cloned into pCSII-EF-MCS-IRES-hrGFP (a generous gift from Dr Hiroyuki Miyoshi, RIKEN, Tsukuba, Japan) with flanking EcoRI and NotI sites to generate Lenti-Mkp1 plasmid. Mkp-1-expressing or mock pCSII-EF-MCS-IRES-hrGFP plasmid was cotransfected with the packaging plasmids, pCMV-Δ8/9 and pVSV-G, into HEK293T cells using Polyethylenimine “Max” (Polysciences) to generate infectious lentivirus. Supernatant was collected 48 h after transduction. Viral particles obtained from two 10cm-dishes were concentrated by ultracentrifugation at 25,000 × g for 2.5 h at 4 °C, and were infected immediately to 4 × 105 primary mouse hepatocytes in culture medium containing 4 g/ml polybrene. After overnight incubation, supernatant was replaced with fresh medium.
Image acquisition and analysis
In vivo and in vitro fluorescent images were analyzed quantitatively. We quantified the length of the β-tubulin-stained intercellular bridge between daughter cells. Intercellular bridge is a region with highly condensed microtubules, and it is defined as a transient structure with about 1 to 2 μm in diameter only appearing toward the end of cytokinesis and just prior to the complete separation of nascent daughter cells. Length of the brightly labeled tubulin bundle in the center of the intercellular bridge between nascent daughter cells was measured using ImageJ. The subcellular fluorescent intensity of pErk1/2 during mitosis was quantified by background-corrected line scans along the central spindle region or midbody using ImageJ. The integrated fluorescence intensity along this line was used as the estimated amount of specific protein in this region. Around 200 dividing hepatocytes were analyzed for each group from three independent experiments. All images were acquired with a fixed exposure time and condition in the same experiment. All quantification of fluorescence intensities was performed under raw 16-bit images, and data were analyzed by GraphPad Prism-5.0.
Flow cytometry
Hepatocytes were isolated and resuspended in ice-cold PBS at a density of 2 × 106 cells/ml. Cells were fixed with 70% ethanol at 4 °C overnight with gentle rotation. Cells were washed with PBS and stained with 1 μg/ml Hoechst-33342 at 4 °C for 60 min. DNA content of labeled cells was measured by flow cytometer (BD, FACSAria II). Acquired data were analyzed by BD FACSDiva software 6.0.
Western blot
Protein extracts were prepared from equal amounts of liver or cultured hepatocytes in Laemmli SDS buffer supplemented with fresh protease (Roche) and phosphatase inhibitors (Nacalai). Western blot was performed as described69 with the following specific antibodies: anti-β−Tubulin (Sigma, T4026), anti-Mek1/2 (Cell Signaling, 9122), anti-phospho-Mek1/2 (Cell Signaling, 9121); anti-Erk1/2 (Cell Signaling, 9102); anti-phospho-Erk1/2 (Cell Signaling, 9101), and anti-Mkp1 (Santa Cruz, SC-1199). Hepatocyte protein extracts were prepared by homogenizing equal amounts of liver tissue in Laemmli SDS sample buffer. The homogenates were boiled at 95 °C for 10 min to denature protein, then centrifuged at 14,000 g for 10 min to remove cell debris. Proteins were resolved by 10% SDS-PAGE mini-gels using reagent from ATTO. Resolved proteins were transferred onto PVDF membrane (WSE-4050–4053 P plus membranes) by semi-dry protein transferring (ATTO; WSE 4040 HorizeBLOT 4M-R) at room temperature. Blots were blocked in TBS with 5% skim milk for 60 min and were followed by treatment with indicated antisera in TBS with 0.05% Tween 20. HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies were used for enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) detecting system and blots were imaged by using Image Quant LAS 4000 (Fujifilm) with ECL-Prime (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). Full size images are presented in Supplementary Fig. 10.
ChIP assay
ChIP assay was performed as described70 with modifications. Livers from mice were homogenized in PBS containing 2 mM disuccinimidyl glutarate (DSG; Pierce) and incubated at room temperature for 20 min. Formaldehyde was then added at 1% of final concentration and incubated for 5 min. Crosslink reaction was stopped by glycine (final concentration, 150 mM) on ice. The homogenates (~5 ml/liver) were mixed with 10 ml ice-cold 2.3 M sucrose buffer including 150 mM glycine, 10 mM HEPES pH 7.6, 15 mM KCl, 2 mM EDTA, 0.15 mM spermine, 0.5 mM spermidine, 0.5 mM DTT, and 0.5 mM PMSF and layered on top of a 5 ml cushion of 1.85 M sucrose buffer (with the same ingredients and including 10% glycerol). The mixtures were centrifuged at 105,000 × g for 1 h at 4 °C in a Beckman SW28 rotor. The resultant nuclear pellets were resuspended in IP buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 1 mM PMSF, protease inhibitor cocktail) and sonicated around 15 s for 80 times at 4 °C using a Bioruptor UCW-201TM apparatus (Tosho Denki). For each reaction, 10 μg fragmented chromatin (resuspended in 500 μl of IP buffer) was pre-cleared by incubation with 40 μl of protein A-agarose (Roche) for 2 h at 4 °C, which was followed by incubation with 2 μl anti-mPer1 rabbit antiserum (Millipore, #AB2201) at 4 °C overnight. 40 μl Protein A/G Plus-agarose (Santa Cruz) was then applied and the mixture was incubated for 1.5 h at 4 °C. Beads wash and DNA elution were performed as described70. Eluted DNA fragments were purified with Qiaquick Nucleotide Removal Kit (QIAGEN) and quantified by qRT–PCR using Mkp1 E-box primers (forward primer, 5′-TAGGCCGATGACGTCTTTG-3′; reverse primer, 5′-CAAACAAACCGTTCTCCCCC-3′) and Mkp1 −4.5 kb/ negative binding site primers (forward primer, 5′-AGCCACCAAGTAGCAACAGC-3′; reverse primer, 5′-GATTCCTGGGTTGGACTGTG-3′).
Statistical analysis
Mice and cultured cells were randomly assigned for time-course study and drugs treatment respectively. Imaging fields were randomly selected during image acquisition. The sample size among experimental groups was kept as equally as possible. The experiments and analysis were conducted in a blind manner and replicated at least three times independently. For the in vivo studies, at least three mice were used for each group. Differences between variables were evaluated using the non-parametric Mann–Whitney test. GraphPad Prism 5.0 software was applied to produce the graphs and statistical analysis. We conducted experiments the intensity of pErk1/2 on the midbody (Fig. 4c), nuclear size along with CV-PV axis (Fig. 1d), change of the liver weight (Supplementary Fig. 1d), characterization of mitotic events in vitro and in vivo (Fig. 3c and Supplementary Fig. 4), and nuclear sizes (Supplementary Fig. 6a) to two-tailed unpaired Student’s t-test with Welch correction. For the effect of time within a group (Figs. 4a, 5a–c and Supplementary Fig. 1a, 6d), the alternation of pErk1/2 intensity on the midbody and cellular dividing events after pharmacological treatment (Figs. 4d, e, 5d, f and Supplementary Fig. 9d), and the difference of mRNA expression level of Mkp family genes (Supplementary Fig. 7c) was statistically analyzed by One-way ANOVA. Two-way ANOVA was applied to DNA content analysis (Fig. 1i), the population of mono- and binuclear hepatocytes during liver development (Fig. 2e, f), the genotype effect on RNA, protein expression and liver weight during circadian time (Figs. 4a, 5a–c and Supplementary Fig. 1a, 6d) and developmental stage (Fig. 1c and Supplementary Fig. 6h, i), and the influence of pharmacological treatment at different timepoints (Fig. 6b). Bonferroni’s multiple comparison test was applied for comparisons among multiple conditions following one-way or two-way ANOVA tests. Sample numbers and statistical results were indicated in the figure legends precisely. Data were presented as the mean ± s.e.m. or s.d., and P-values <0.05 were considered significant. P-values are represented as *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 and ***P < 0.001.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon request.
References
Hastings, M. H., Maywood, E. S. & O’Neill, J. S. Cellular circadian pacemaking and the role of cytosolic rhythms. Curr. Biol. 18, R805–R815 (2008).
Dunlap, J. C. Molecular bases for circadian clocks. Cell 96, 271–290 (1999).
Schibler, U. & Sassone-Corsi, P. A web of circadian pacemakers. Cell 111, 919–922 (2002).
Bass, J. Circadian topology of metabolism. Nature 491, 348–356 (2012).
Fustin, J. M. et al. Rhythmic nucleotide synthesis in the liver: temporal segregation of metabolites. Cell Rep. 1, 341–349 (2012).
Eckel-Mahan, K. L. et al. Coordination of the transcriptome and metabolome by the circadian clock. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 5541–5546 (2012).
Asher, G. & Sassone-Corsi, P. Time for food: the intimate interplay between nutrition, metabolism, and the circadian clock. Cell 161, 84–92 (2015).
Gerber, A. et al. The systemic control of circadian gene expression. Diabetes Obes. Metab. 17(Suppl 1), 23–32 (2015).
Magami, Y. et al. Cell proliferation and renewal of normal hepatocytes and bile duct cells in adult mouse liver. Liver 22, 419–425 (2002).
Malato, Y. et al. Fate tracing of mature hepatocytes in mouse liver homeostasis and regeneration. J. Clin. Invest. 121, 4850–4860 (2011).
Yanger, K. et al. Adult hepatocytes are generated by self-duplication rather than stem cell differentiation. Cell Stem Cell 15, 340–349 (2014).
Wang, B., Zhao, L., Fish, M., Logan, C. Y. & Nusse, R. Self-renewing diploid Axin2(+) cells fuel homeostatic renewal of the liver. Nature 524, 180–185 (2015).
Huch, M. et al. In vitro expansion of single Lgr5 + liver stem cells induced by Wnt-driven regeneration. Nature 494, 247–250 (2013).
Gehart, H. & Clevers, H. Repairing organs: lessons from intestine and liver. Trends Genet 31, 344–351 (2015).
Okamura, H. Clock genes in cell clocks: roles, actions, and mysteries. J. Biol. Rhythms 19, 388–399 (2004).
Storchova, Z. & Pellman, D. From polyploidy to aneuploidy, genome instability and cancer. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell. Biol. 5, 45–54 (2004).
Comai, L. The advantages and disadvantages of being polyploid. Nat. Rev. Genet. 6, 836–846 (2005).
Lewis, W. H. (ed.) Polyploidy: Biological Relevance (Plenum Press, New York, 1980).
Eiben, B. et al. Cytogenetic analysis of 750 spontaneous abortions with the direct-preparation method of chorionic villi and its implications for studying genetic causes of pregnancy wastage. Am. J. Hum. Genet 47, 656–663 (1990).
Otto, S. P. The evolutionary consequences of polyploidy. Cell 131, 452–462 (2007).
Miline, L. S. The histology of liver tissue regeneration. J. Pathol. Bacteriol. 13, 127–158 (1909).
Epstein, C. J. Cell size, nuclear content, and the development of polyploidy in the Mammalian liver. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 57, 327–334 (1967).
Medvedev, Z. A. Age-related polyploidization of hepatocytes: the cause and possible role. A mini-review. Exp. Gerontol. 21, 277–282 (1986).
Brodsky, V. Y. & Uryuvaeva, I. V. In: Genome Multiplication in Growth and Development: Biology of Polyploid and Polytene Cells. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 313p (1985).
Pandit, S. K. et al. E2F8 is essential for polyploidization in mammalian cells. Nat. Cell Biol. 14, 1181–1191 (2012).
Celton-Morizur, S., Merlen, G., Couton, D., Margall-Ducos, G. & Desdouets, C. The insulin/Akt pathway controls a specific cell division program that leads to generation of binucleated tetraploid liver cells in rodents. J. Clin. Invest. 119, 1880–1887 (2009).
Hsu, S. H. et al. MicroRNA-122 regulates polyploidization in the murine liver. Hepatology 64, 599–615 (2016).
Cermakian, N., Monaco, L., Pando, M. P., Dierich, A. & Sassone-Corsi, P. Altered behavioral rhythms and clock gene expression in mice with a targeted mutation in the Period1 gene. EMBO J. 20, 3967–3974 (2001).
Zheng, B. et al. The mPer2 gene encodes a functional component of the mammalian circadian clock. Nature 400, 169–173 (1999).
Shearman, L. P., Jin, X., Lee, C., Reppert, S. M. & Weaver, D. R. Targeted disruption of the mPer3 gene: subtle effects on circadian clock function. Mol. Cell. Biol. 20, 6269–6275 (2000).
Morales-Navarrete, H. et al. A versatile pipeline for the multi-scale digital reconstruction and quantitative analysis of 3D tissue architecture. Elife 4, pii: e11214 (2015).
Tanami, S. et al. Dynamic zonation of liver polyploidy. Cell Tissue Res. 368, 405–410 (2016).
Nadal, C. & Zajdela, F. [Somatic polyploid cells in rat liver. I. The role of binuclear cells in the formation of the polyploid cells]. Exp. Cell Res 42, 99–116 (1966).
Margall-Ducos, G., Celton-Morizur, S., Couton, D., Bregerie, O. & Desdouets, C. Liver tetraploidization is controlled by a new process of incomplete cytokinesis. J. Cell Sci. 120, 3633–3639 (2007).
Duncan, A. W. Aneuploidy, polyploidy and ploidy reversal in the liver. Semin. Cell Dev. Biol. 24, 347–356 (2013).
Tsuchiya, Y., Minami, I., Kadotani, H., Todo, T. & Nishida, E. Circadian clock-controlled diurnal oscillation of Ras/ERK signaling in mouse liver. Proc. Jpn Acad. B Phys. Biol. Sci. 89, 59–65 (2013).
Favata, M. F. et al. Identification of a novel inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase. J. Biol. Chem. 273, 18623–18632 (1998).
Kasahara, K. et al. Src signaling regulates completion of abscission in cytokinesis through ERK/MAPK activation at the midbody. J. Biol. Chem. 282, 5327–5339 (2007).
Doi, M. et al. Light-inducible and clock-controlled expression of MAP kinase phosphatase 1 in mouse central pacemaker neurons. J. Biol. Rhythms 22, 127–139 (2007).
Yoshitane, H. et al. CLOCK-controlled polyphonic regulation of circadian rhythms through canonical and noncanonical E-boxes. Mol. Cell. Biol. 34, 1776–1787 (2014).
Annayev, Y. et al. Gene model 129 (Gm129) encodes a novel transcriptional repressor that modulates circadian gene expression. J. Biol. Chem. 289, 5013–5024 (2014).
Molina, G. et al. Zebrafish chemical screening reveals an inhibitor of Dusp6 that expands cardiac cell lineages. Nat. Chem. Biol. 5, 680–687 (2009).
Chang, L. & Karin, M. Mammalian MAP kinase signalling cascades. Nature 410, 37–40 (2001).
Liu, Y. S., Shepherd, E. G. & Nelin, L. D. MAPK phosphatases - regulating the immune response. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 7, 202–212 (2007).
Roth Flach, R. J. & Bennett, A. M. Mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase-1 - a potential therapeutic target in metabolic disease. Expert Opin. Ther. Targets 14, 1323–1332 (2010).
Wu, J. J. et al. Mice lacking MAP kinase phosphatase-1 have enhanced MAP kinase activity and resistance to diet-induced obesity. Cell Metab. 4, 61–73 (2006).
Khadir, A. et al. MAP kinase phosphatase DUSP1 is overexpressed in obese humans and modulated by physical exercise. Am. J. Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab. 308, E71–E83 (2015).
Skop, A. R. et al. Dissection of the mammalian midbody proteome reveals conserved cytokinesis mechanisms. Science 305, 61–66 (2004).
Carlton, J. G., Caballe, A., Agromayor, M., Kloc, M. & Martin-Serrano, J. ESCRT-III governs the Aurora B-mediated abscission checkpoint through CHMP4C. Science 336, 220–225 (2012).
Christ, L., Raiborg, C., Wenzel, E. M., Campsteijn, C. & Stenmark, H. Cellular Functions and Molecular Mechanisms of the ESCRT Membrane-Scission Machinery. Trends Biochem Sci. 42, 42–56 (2017).
Nakanishi, K. & Fujita, S. Molecular mechanism of polyploidization and binucleate Formation of the Hepatocyte. Cell Struct. Funct. 2, 261–265 (1977).
Diril, M. K. et al. Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) is essential for cell division and suppression of DNA re-replication but not for liver regeneration. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 3826–3831 (2012).
Stefanescu, D. T., Moanga, M., Teodorescu, M. & Brucher, J. Chromosome abnormalities in chronic active hepatitis. J. Clin. Pathol. 25, 705–707 (1972).
Levi, F. Circadian chronotherapy for human cancers. Lancet Oncol. 2, 307–315 (2001).
Fu, L., Pelicano, H., Liu, J., Huang, P. & Lee, C. The circadian gene Period2 plays an important role in tumor suppression and DNA damage response in vivo. Cell 111, 41–50 (2002).
Climent, J. et al. Deletion of the PER3 gene on chromosome 1p36 in recurrent ER-positive breast cancer. J. Clin. Oncol. 28, 3770–3778 (2010).
Kettner, N. M. et al. Circadian Homeostasis of Liver Metabolism Suppresses Hepatocarcinogenesis. Cancer Cell 30, 909–924 (2016).
Duncan, A. W. et al. The ploidy conveyor of mature hepatocytes as a source of genetic variation. Nature 467, 707–710 (2010).
Guidotti, J. E. et al. Liver cell polyploidization: a pivotal role for binuclear hepatocytes. J. Biol. Chem. 278, 19095–19101 (2003).
Gentric, G. et al. Oxidative stress promotes pathologic polyploidization in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. J. Clin. Invest. 125, 981–992 (2015).
Carriere, R. The growth of liver parenchymal nuclei and its endocrine regulation. Int. Rev. Cytol. 25, 201–277 (1969).
Enesco, H. E., Shimokawa, I. & Yu, B. P. Effect of dietary restriction and aging on polyploidy in rat liver. Mech. Ageing Dev. 59, 69–78 (1991).
Wheatley, D. N. Binucleation in mammalian liver. Studies on the control of cytokinesis in vivo. Exp. Cell Res. 74, 455–465 (1972).
Matsuo, T. et al. Control mechanism of the circadian clock for timing of cell division in vivo. Science 302, 255–259 (2003).
Masri, S., Cervantes, M. & Sassone-Corsi, P. The circadian clock and cell cycle: interconnected biological circuits. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 25, 730–734 (2013).
Tanaka, R. et al. Accurate determination of S-phase fraction in proliferative cells by dual fluorescence and peroxidase immunohistochemistry with 5-bromo-2’-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and Ki67 antibodies. J. Histochem Cytochem 59, 791–798 (2011).
Matsumoto, M. et al. Role of the insulin receptor substrate 1 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling pathway in insulin-induced expression of sterol regulatory element binding protein 1c and glucokinase genes in rat hepatocytes. Diabetes 51, 1672–1680 (2002).
Shenvi, S. V., Dixon, B. M., Petersen Shay, K. & Hagen, T. M. A rat primary hepatocyte culture model for aging studies. Curr Protoc Toxicol Chapter 14, Unit–14.7 (2008).
Doi, M. et al. Circadian regulation of intracellular G-protein signalling mediates intercellular synchrony and rhythmicity in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. Nat. Commun. 2, 327 (2011).
Ota, T. et al. Angiotensin II triggers expression of the adrenal gland zona glomerulosa-specific 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase isoenzyme through de novo protein synthesis of the orphan nuclear receptors NGFIB and NURR1. Mol. Cell. Biol. 34, 3880–3894 (2014).
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Dr. Paolo Sassone-Corsi (UC Irvine) and Dr. David Weaver (U Massachusetts) for Per1-knockout mice and Per3-knockout mice, respectively. We also thank Okamura-lab members for assistances and discussions during the course of this study, particularly to Dr. Satoru Masubuchi for backcross breeding to standard BALB/c strain for Per1-knockout mice, Shoichi Urabe, Miho Yasuda and Shota Akazawa for Per2- and Per3-knockout mice. We also thank to Dr. Yi-Shuian Huang (Academia Sinica) for providing equipment in Taiwan, and to Dr. William J. Schwartz (University of Texas Dell Medical School) and Dr. Setsuya Fujita (Emeritus Professor of Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine) for stimulating discussions. This research was supported by Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (JPMJCR14W3-CREST), Japan Science and Technology Agency (to H.O.), and Scientific grants from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (to H.O.), and grants from Takeda Science Foundation, Kobayashi International Scholarship Foundation and SRF (to H.O.). H.-W.C. is supported by a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship Program for Foreign Researchers and a Takeda Science Foundation research fellowship.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
H.O. conceived the project, H.-W.C. and H.O. designed the research. H.W.C. conducted most of the biochemical and histological experiments in collaboration with M.D., J.-M.F., S.H., H.C., H.H., R.T., M.S., N.M., Y.M., Y.Y., J.-i.Y., M.S., Mi.M., and S.H. H.-W.C., M.D., J.-M.F., K.M., Ma.M., and Mi.M. performed data analyses. H.-W.C. and H.O. drafted the paper supported by M.D., J.M.F. and S.H.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Additional information
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Chao, HW., Doi, M., Fustin, JM. et al. Circadian clock regulates hepatic polyploidy by modulating Mkp1-Erk1/2 signaling pathway. Nat Commun 8, 2238 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02207-7
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02207-7
This article is cited by
-
Mammalian PERIOD2 regulates H2A.Z incorporation in chromatin to orchestrate circadian negative feedback
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology (2022)
-
Hyperpolyploidization of hepatocyte initiates preneoplastic lesion formation in the liver
Nature Communications (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.