Charles Weitz

Charles Weitz, MD, PhD

Robert Henry Pfeiffer Professor of Neurobiology

Mammalian Circadian Clocks

Circadian clocks are molecular oscillators with ~24-hour periods that drive daily biological rhythms. Such clocks are found in all of the major branches of life, and they likely represent ancient timekeeping systems important for predicting daily environmental cycles on our rotating planet. In mammals, circadian clocks are present in most if not all cells. These distributed clocks control a myriad of processes, in aggregate creating coherent 24-hour programs of physiology and behavior.

A picture of how circadian clocks are built has emerged in the last two decades. The core mechanism is a transcriptional feedback loop, wherein the protein products of several clock genes build the molecular machinery to inhibit the transcription factor responsible for their own production. The molecular components of circadian clocks are conserved from insects to humans.

The Weitz lab uses molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics, and structural biology to investigate the mammalian circadian clock. The focus of our efforts at present is to understand the circadian clock in terms of the integrated functions of its several multi-protein machines, principally by means of biochemistry and cryo-electron microscopy structural biology studies.

Publications View
Role of the CLOCK protein in the mammalian circadian mechanism.
Authors: Authors: Gekakis N, Staknis D, Nguyen HB, Davis FC, Wilsbacher LD, King DP, Takahashi JS, Weitz CJ.
Science
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Closing the circadian loop: CLOCK-induced transcription of its own inhibitors per and tim.
Authors: Authors: Darlington TK, Wager-Smith K, Ceriani MF, Staknis D, Gekakis N, Steeves TD, Weitz CJ, Takahashi JS, Kay SA.
Science
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A screen for genes induced in the suprachiasmatic nucleus by light.
Authors: Authors: Morris ME, Viswanathan N, Kuhlman S, Davis FC, Weitz CJ.
Science
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Circadian timekeeping: loops and layers of transcriptional control.
Authors: Authors: Weitz CJ.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Isolation of timeless by PER protein interaction: defective interaction between timeless protein and long-period mutant PERL.
Authors: Authors: Gekakis N, Saez L, Delahaye-Brown AM, Myers MP, Sehgal A, Young MW, Weitz CJ.
Science
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Human tritanopia associated with two amino acid substitutions in the blue-sensitive opsin.
Authors: Authors: Weitz CJ, Miyake Y, Shinzato K, Montag E, Zrenner E, Went LN, Nathans J.
Am J Hum Genet
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Histidine residues regulate the transition of photoexcited rhodopsin to its active conformation, metarhodopsin II.
Authors: Authors: Weitz CJ, Nathans J.
Neuron
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Production of bovine rhodopsin by mammalian cell lines expressing cloned cDNA: spectrophotometry and subcellular localization.
Authors: Authors: Nathans J, Weitz CJ, Agarwal N, Nir I, Papermaster DS.
Vision Res
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Synthesis of the skeleton of the morphine molecule by mammalian liver.
Authors: Authors: Weitz CJ, Faull KF, Goldstein A.
Nature
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