Marine Biological Laboratory
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The Marine Biological Laboratory is an international center for research, education, and training in biology, biomedicine, and ecology.
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Still Image100 Years Exploring Life cover image(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2017-07-20)
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Text100 Years Exploring Life, 1888-1988: the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-05-18)
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Article12-h clock regulation of genetic information flow by XBP1s(Public Library of Science, 2020-01-14) Pan, Yinghong ; Ballance, Heather ; Meng, Huan ; Gonzalez, Naomi ; Kim, Sam-Moon ; Abdurehman, Leymaan ; York, Brian ; Chen, Xi ; Schnytzer, Yisrael ; Levy, Oren ; Dacso, Clifford C. ; McClung, Colleen A. ; O’Malley, Bert W. ; Liu, Silvia ; Zhu, BokaiOur group recently characterized a cell-autonomous mammalian 12-h clock independent from the circadian clock, but its function and mechanism of regulation remain poorly understood. Here, we show that in mouse liver, transcriptional regulation significantly contributes to the establishment of 12-h rhythms of mRNA expression in a manner dependent on Spliced Form of X-box Binding Protein 1 (XBP1s). Mechanistically, the motif stringency of XBP1s promoter binding sites dictates XBP1s’s ability to drive 12-h rhythms of nascent mRNA transcription at dawn and dusk, which are enriched for basal transcription regulation, mRNA processing and export, ribosome biogenesis, translation initiation, and protein processing/sorting in the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)-Golgi in a temporal order consistent with the progressive molecular processing sequence described by the central dogma information flow (CEDIF). We further identified GA-binding proteins (GABPs) as putative novel transcriptional regulators driving 12-h rhythms of gene expression with more diverse phases. These 12-h rhythms of gene expression are cell autonomous and evolutionarily conserved in marine animals possessing a circatidal clock. Our results demonstrate an evolutionarily conserved, intricate network of transcriptional control of the mammalian 12-h clock that mediates diverse biological pathways. We speculate that the 12-h clock is coopted to accommodate elevated gene expression and processing in mammals at the two rush hours, with the particular genes processed at each rush hour regulated by the circadian and/or tissue-specific pathways.
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Text18 year-round MBL scientists to the Director, Executive Committee, and Trustees of MBL, January 28, 1992.(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2017-07-06)
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Text1888 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1889 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1890 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1891 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1892 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1892 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Text1893 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)
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Still Image1893 Instructors(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Instructors (Overlay)(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists in Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists in Laboratory (Overlay)(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists, group 1(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists, group 1 (Overlay)(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists, group 2(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Still Image1893 Scientists, group 2 (Overlay)(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-06-15)
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Text1894 Annual Report: Marine Biological Laboratory(Marine Biological Laboratory, 2012-04-17)