Faculty Opinions recommendation of tej defines a role for poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in establishing period length of the arabidopsis circadian oscillator.

Author(s):  
Paolo Sassone-Corsi
1982 ◽  
Vol 37 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 1266-1273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilhelmine Erckens ◽  
Wolfgang Martin

Abstract 1. The swimming activity of 6 specimens of the Pachon cave form of Astyanax mexicanus was tested with regard to its time control under various light-dark(LD)cycles and constant conditions, and it is compared to that of a river form. 2. In general, activity is entrainable by all applied LDs, but even if the amplitude of a forcing signal increases the signal energies are lower than in the river fish. 3. In case of entrainment the maximum values of surface activity correspond to the dark phases, those of bottom activity to the light phases of a LD. Flexible patterns -as often observed in the river form in the range of resonance about 24 h - are very seldom. Furthermore, disturbances of­ ten occur in the entrainment of one activity form, or one form runs arrhythmic while the other is still entrained. 4. The activity answers to changing environmental conditions are not as uniformly quick as in the river fish. But the system hardly needs a swing-in time to become entrained when a LD starts. 5. After transition from LD to DD (= constant darkness) the entrained rhythms disappear immediately. 6. In no LD with a period length differing from 24 h a circadian rhythm can be observed in addition to the entrained frequency. 7. These results show that the passive system of the river form has developped into an extremely passive one being unable to oscillate and thus has become simplified during regressive evolution. Concerning the circadian oscillator of the epigean ancestor, it was also subjected to regression, but it has not been completely lost. After a LD with a period length about 24 h the circadian oscillator is able to act as a stable system, clearly shown by the freerunning circadian rhythms of surface activity. But out of this range the oscillator is unable to control activity. In DD after all other LDs activity patterns are arrhythmic.


FEBS Letters ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 585 (14) ◽  
pp. 2217-2222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daisuke Yamajuku ◽  
Yasutaka Shibata ◽  
Masashi Kitazawa ◽  
Toshie Katakura ◽  
Hiromi Urata ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (51) ◽  
pp. 15707-15712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jillian M. Emerson ◽  
Bradley M. Bartholomai ◽  
Carol S. Ringelberg ◽  
Scott E. Baker ◽  
Jennifer J. Loros ◽  
...  

Mutants in the period-1 (prd-1) gene, characterized by a recessive allele, display a reduced growth rate and period lengthening of the developmental cycle controlled by the circadian clock. We refined the genetic location of prd-1 and used whole genome sequencing to find the mutation defining it, confirming the identity of prd-1 by rescuing the mutant circadian phenotype via transformation. PRD-1 is an RNA helicase whose orthologs, DDX5 [DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) Box Helicase 5] and DDX17 in humans and DBP2 (Dead Box Protein 2) in yeast, are implicated in various processes, including transcriptional regulation, elongation, and termination, ribosome biogenesis, and mRNA decay. Although prd-1 mutants display a long period (∼25 h) circadian developmental cycle, they interestingly display a WT period when the core circadian oscillator is tracked using a frq-luciferase transcriptional fusion under conditions of limiting nutritional carbon; the core oscillator in the prd-1 mutant strain runs with a long period under glucose-sufficient conditions. Thus, PRD-1 clearly impacts the circadian oscillator and is not only part of a metabolic oscillator ancillary to the core clock. PRD-1 is an essential protein, and its expression is neither light-regulated nor clock-regulated. However, it is transiently induced by glucose; in the presence of sufficient glucose, PRD-1 is in the nucleus until glucose runs out, which elicits its disappearance from the nucleus. Because circadian period length is carbon concentration-dependent, prd-1 may be formally viewed as a clock mutant with defective nutritional compensation of circadian period length.


2021 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Boustan ◽  
V. Vahedi ◽  
M. Abdi Farab ◽  
H. Karami ◽  
R. Seyedsharifi ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerry F Feldman ◽  
Marian N Hoyle

ABSTRACT A fourth mutant of Neurospora crassa, designated frq-4, has been isolated in which the period length of the circadian conidiation rhythm is shortened to 19.3 ± 0.3 hours. This mutant is tightly linked to the three previously isolated frq mutants, and all four map to the right arm of linkage group VII about 10 map units from the centromere. Complementation tests suggest, but do not prove, that all four mutations are allelic, since each of the four mutants is co-dominant with the frq  + allele—i.e., heterokaryons have period lengths intermediate between the mutant and wild-type—and since heterokaryons between pairs of mutants also have period lengths intermediate between those of the two mutants.


2004 ◽  
Vol 318 (1) ◽  
pp. 156-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keiko Nakahara ◽  
Reiko Hanada ◽  
Noboru Murakami ◽  
Hitoshi Teranishi ◽  
Hideko Ohgusu ◽  
...  

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