An hPer2 Phosphorylation Site Mutation in Familial Advanced Sleep Phase Syndrome

KL Toh, CR Jones, Y He, EJ Eide, WA Hinz… - Science, 2001 - science.org
KL Toh, CR Jones, Y He, EJ Eide, WA Hinz, DM Virshup, LJ Ptácek, YH Fu
Science, 2001science.org
Familial advanced sleep phase syndrome (FASPS) is an autosomal dominant circadian
rhythm variant; affected individuals are “morning larks” with a 4-hour advance of the sleep,
temperature, and melatonin rhythms. Here we report localization of the FASPS gene near
the telomere of chromosome 2q. A strong candidate gene (h Per2), a human homolog of the
period gene in Drosophila, maps to the same locus. Affected individuals have a serine to
glycine mutation within the casein kinase I ɛ (CKI ɛ) binding region of hPER2, which causes …
Familial advanced sleep phase syndrome (FASPS) is an autosomal dominant circadian rhythm variant; affected individuals are “morning larks” with a 4-hour advance of the sleep, temperature, and melatonin rhythms. Here we report localization of the FASPS gene near the telomere of chromosome 2q. A strong candidate gene (hPer2), a human homolog of the period gene in Drosophila, maps to the same locus. Affected individuals have a serine to glycine mutation within the casein kinase Iɛ(CKIɛ) binding region of hPER2, which causes hypophosphorylation by CKIɛ in vitro. Thus, a variant in human sleep behavior can be attributed to a missense mutation in a clock component, hPER2, which alters the circadian period.
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