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First published online April 14, 2006; 10.1105/tpc.105.039990 The Plant Cell 18:1177-1187 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists The Molecular Basis of Temperature Compensation in the Arabidopsis Circadian Clock[W]
a School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail andrew.millar{at}ed.ac.uk or anthony.hall{at}liverpool.ac.uk; fax 44-0131-6505392 or 44-0151-7954403.
Circadian clocks maintain robust and accurate timing over a broad range of physiological temperatures, a characteristic termed temperature compensation. In Arabidopsis thaliana, ambient temperature affects the rhythmic accumulation of transcripts encoding the clock components TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION1 (TOC1), GIGANTEA (GI), and the partially redundant genes CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED1 (CCA1) and LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY). The amplitude and peak levels increase for TOC1 and GI RNA rhythms as the temperature increases (from 17 to 27°C), whereas they decrease for LHY. However, as temperatures decrease (from 17 to 12°C), CCA1 and LHY RNA rhythms increase in amplitude and peak expression level. At 27°C, a dynamic balance between GI and LHY allows temperature compensation in wild-type plants, but circadian function is impaired in lhy and gi mutant plants. However, at 12°C, CCA1 has more effect on the buffering mechanism than LHY, as the cca1 and gi mutations impair circadian rhythms more than lhy at the lower temperature. At 17°C, GI is apparently dispensable for free-running circadian rhythms, although partial GI function can affect circadian period. Numerical simulations using the interlocking-loop model show that balancing LHY/CCA1 function against GI and other evening-expressed genes can largely account for temperature compensation in wild-type plants and the temperature-specific phenotypes of gi mutants.
The circadian clock is an endogenous 24-h timer found in most eukaryotes and in photosynthetic bacteria. The clock drives rhythms in the physiology, biochemistry, and metabolism of the organisms (reviewed in Hall and McWatters, 2006 24 h, that can be entrained to local time, and that are capable of maintaining a constant periodicity over a broad range of physiological temperatures. Intriguingly, although these characteristics of the clock are shared across taxonomic groups, there is little conservation of the molecular components used (reviewed in Harmer et al., 2001
In Arabidopsis thaliana, a transcription feedback loop model has been proposed for the clock, similar to the architecture of the clock in other organisms. The loop comprises two myb transcription factors, LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY) and CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED1 (CCA1), which are proposed to function by repressing the expression of TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION1 (TOC1), which encodes a pseudoresponse regulator of unknown biological function. TOC1, in turn, activates LHY/CCA1 (Alabadi et al., 2001
One of the key characteristics of all circadian rhythms is that they are able to maintain robust rhythms with a period close to 24 h over a broad range of physiological temperatures; this property is termed temperature compensation. In Drosophila, studies identified a role for the key clock component PERIOD (PER) in temperature responses, including temperature-dependent variation in Per protein properties (Sawyer et al., 1997
To identify components of the temperature compensation mechanism in the model plant Arabidopsis, a quantitative genetic approach has been used. This exploits accession-specific variations in the pattern of temperature compensation for rhythms of leaf movement between Columbia (Col) and Landsberg erecta (Ler) and between Ler and Cape Verde Islands (Cvi). This strategy uncovered a number of quantitative trait loci (QTL) across the genome. The genes underlying some of these, such as the flowering regulator FLOWERING LOCUS C (Edwards et al., 2006
The gi alleles were originally identified as supervital mutants having increased fitness as measured by high fecundity, resulting in increased seed yield per plant. The basis for this was the large rosettes and late flowering of the mutants (Rédei, 1962 In this study, we demonstrate that the gene GI plays a critical role in increasing the temperature range permissive for rhythmicity, extending the temperature range over which both the robust rhythms of CAB expression and leaf movement rhythms can be maintained. We go on to investigate, first, how key components of the wild-type circadian mechanism (GI, LHY, CCA1, and TOC1) change in response to altered temperature. Second, we describe how this temperature-specific regulation is altered in the gi mutant, identifying a mechanism for the temperature-specific phenotype of GI. We conclude that a dynamic balance between LHY and GI is key for the effective temperature compensation of the circadian clock at high temperatures, whereas at low temperature LHY appears to be substituted by CCA1. In addition to this role in temperature compensation, GI also plays a critical role in extending the temperature range over which robust and accurate rhythmicity can be maintained.
GI Plays a Critical Role in Maintaining Rhythmicity in Leaf Movement at Higher Temperatures The QTL PerCv1b was identified as a locus involved in temperature compensation of the circadian clock from a screen of Cvi x Ler recombinant inbred lines. Further mapping of this QTL using near isogenic lines localized the QTL to an 900-kb region of chromosome 1. Within this region was the flowering-time gene GI. Sequencing GI from Ler and Cvi revealed a number of polymorphisms, two of which resulted in amino acid substitutions (Edwards et al., 2005
To identify a role for GI in the temperature buffering of the circadian clock, circadian rhythms of leaf movement in the gi null mutant gi-11 over a range of temperatures (12, 17, 22, and 27°C) were characterized. The gi-11 null mutant is a T-DNA insertion mutation and has been described previously (Richardson et al., 1998
In addition to a shortening of the period, a temperature-dependent increase in the variance of period was seen for the gi mutant, with the variance increasing from 3.1 at 17°C to 18.0 at 27°C (F test, P = 1.8 x 109). Although an increase in the variance of period with temperature was also observed for the wild type, this was not of the same magnitude (from 1.9 at 17°C to 3.8 at 27°C; F test, P = 4.1 x 103). The huge increase in the variance of period in the gi mutant at 27°C demonstrates a breakdown in the precision of the clock. This reduced precision could clearly be seen when period estimates for each leaf movement rhythm were plotted against the relative amplitude error (Figure 1B), a measure of rhythm robustness varying from 0 (a perfect fit to the cosine wave) to 1 (not statistically significant). For wild-type period estimates, the associated relative amplitude errors remained low, with all 60 points clustering tightly at each temperature (Figure 1B). However, for the gi mutant, as temperature increased, both the relative amplitude error and the range of period estimates increased. Similarly, as temperature decreased to <17°C, the variability and relative amplitude errors increased (Figure 1B). Similar results were seen for the gi-3 allele in the Ler background, with temperature-dependent effects on both period and rhythm robustness observed (see Supplemental Figure 2 online). However, unlike the null mutant, the period of gi-3 was not wild type at 17°C. The gi-3 mutation introduces a stop codon at the 3' end of the gene; therefore, a truncated GI protein can be produced. Furthermore, the expression of GI mRNA in the gi-3 mutant had only been reduced by half (Fowler et al., 1999
GI Plays a Comparable Role Maintaining the Rhythmicity of Expression of CAB:LUC at High and Low Temperatures
Temperature Regulation of Clock-Related Gene Expression To investigate how key molecular clock components respond to ambient temperature in wild-type plants, the accumulation of transcripts that encoded CCA1, LHY, and TOC1 was measured. Plants were entrained for 7 d with 12L:12D cycles before transfer to 12, 17, or 27°C and constant light. Transcript abundance was then assayed, starting at 72 h after transfer, every 4 h over a 24-h period. Figures 3A to 3C compare transcript abundance and expression patterns of plants free-running at 17 and 27°C. At 27°C, the amplitude of the TOC1 expression rhythm was almost double that at 17°C, with the trough level of expression remaining constant but the peak level increased. Also, the shoulder seen after the peak of expression was lost at 27°C. A temperature-dependent increase in expression was also observed for GI (Figure 4 ). The reciprocal was observed for LHY levels, with the amplitude of the oscillation of LHY decreasing at 27°C. CCA1 expression showed no significant change with increased temperature. The difference in response of LHY and CCA1 was consistent with the two genes not playing completely redundant roles. A temperature-dependent increase in clock components, similar to that seen for TOC1, has also been observed in Neurospora, in which the amount/amplitude of FRQ protein increased with temperature (Liu et al., 1998
Although only subtle changes in the regulation of clock components were observed between 17 and 12°C, in a microarray experiment comparing seedlings grown at 22 and 4°C, transcripts encoding many of the known clock components rapidly dampened to a high level upon transfer to 4°C (NASCArrays experiment reference number NASCARRAYS-138; see Supplemental Figure 4 online). Although this microarray analysis is consistent with a loss of clock function at 4°C, a longer time course will be required to confirm this finding. However, this apparent loss of rhythmicity has also been observed in chestnut (Castanea sativa), in which the levels of Cs LHY and Cs TOC1 dampened to a high level upon transfer to 4°C, with LHY failing to repress TOC1 levels (Ramos et al., 2005
Temperature-Dependent GI Function at the Molecular Level
We also tested changes in gene expression in CCA1, LHY, and TOC1 in the wild type and the gi mutant at 12°C (Figure 3). Little change in the expression of clock components in response to decreases in temperature was observed in the wild type; however, in the gi mutant, the expression of both CCA1 and TOC1 decreased, with the expression of TOC1 becoming biphasic, with two peaks of expression only 12 h apart. This was not observed for CCA1 or LHY, consistent with a breakdown of the feedback regulatory loop composed of CCA1/LHY and TOC1 described by Alabadi et al. (2001)
The Interlocking Loop Model Supports GI Function in Temperature Compensation The wild type at 27°C was modeled as having reduced LHY expression (Figure 3), which would shorten the circadian period if this were the only effect of temperature. Higher GI expression in the model (following the trend in Figure 4) compensated for the reduced LHY levels, substantially restoring the period length and also recapitulating several features of the molecular data in Figure 3 (see Supplemental Methods and Supplemental Figure 5 online). In particular, a gi mutation in the model had a more severe low-amplitude phenotype at 27°C compared with the standard temperature (see Supplemental Figure 5 online), consistent with the experimental data (Figures 1 and 2). The wild type at 12°C was modeled by increasing the transcription rate of LHY, as LHY RNA levels are increased at lower temperatures (see Supplemental Figure 3C online). GI RNA levels were little reduced at 12°C (Figure 4), but reducing Y transcription rates in the model again compensated the circadian period. The simulated gi mutation again recapitulated the observed effects of the gi mutant at 12°C (see Supplemental Figure 6 online). We propose that the reduced Y function that was required to simulate the wild type at 12°C might represent downregulation of another gene that contributes to Y, overlapping with GI function (see Supplemental Methods online). Altering only the LHY and Y transcription rates was sufficient to recreate the major effects of temperature on clock gene expression, showing that the temperature-dependent effects of GI proposed here are consistent with GI's location as a component of Y in the two-feedback-loop model.
LHY and CCA1 Contribute Differentially to Temperature Compensation
Our characterization of key components of the circadian clock over a range of temperatures has uncovered temperature-dependent changes in their gene expression. We found that levels of LHY mRNA decrease with temperature increases and that this was counterbalanced by increases in TOC1 and GI. By contrast, CCA1 levels changed little between 27 and 17°C; however, we did see an increase at lower temperatures (Figures 3 and 4). This balance between clock components is consistent with the antagonistic balance model of temperature compensation put forward by Ruoff et al. (1997)
First, we considered compensation of the clock in response to increasing temperature. The effects of increases in temperature could be simulated by reducing LHY transcription rates, causing a shortening of the period; however, this could be balanced by increasing GI transcription levels. Although the experimental increases in GI expression were not pronounced, there was a gradual increase in peak expression with temperature (Figure 4). It has been shown that the GI protein oscillates and that this is regulated at the posttranscriptional level (David et al., 2006 In support of this dynamic counterbalance hypothesis, we show that a null gi mutant (gi-11) has a temperature-dependent circadian phenotype, affecting both robustness and period (Figures 1 and 2). In gi-11, the counterbalance between GI and LHY is lost and LHY RNA levels decrease at 27°C. A similar temperature compensation phenotype was also observed in the gi-611 and gi-3 alleles; however, the partial gi-611 mutation does not display the loss of rhythm robustness with temperature (see Supplemental Figure 3 online). The lhy loss-of-function mutant likewise shows a strong period alteration at high temperature (Figure 5). This proposal can account for temperature compensation at 27°C, but our experimental data show that different processes are involved at low temperature. Specifically, between 17 and 12°C, GI expression is little altered in the wild type, and the gi mutation reduces the expression of CCA1 rather than LHY. Furthermore, at 12°C, the cca1 loss-of-function mutant alters period more severely than the lhy mutation and also reduces rhythmic robustness, the reverse of the situation at 27°C. At low temperature, our data are consistent with CCA1 replacing LHY in temperature compensation of the clock. The switch in the apparent importance of these two transcription factors may reflect unknown differences in temperature-dependent biochemical properties of the two proteins. GI participates by regulating the relative expression levels of CCA1 and LHY in a temperature-dependent manner, as demonstrated by the effects of the gi mutation, thus contributing to the stable period over a wide range of temperatures. The qualitative effect of decreases in temperature could be simulated by increasing LHY transcription rates, causing an increase in the period, which could be balanced by decreasing the transcription rates of components of Y redundant to GI (see Supplemental Methods Figure 6 online). In addition to its effect on period, the gi null mutant affects the robustness of circadian rhythms, an effect not shared by the partial gi-611 allele. The lhy mutant at 27°C affects only the circadian period, not rhythmic robustness, but cca1 at 12°C affects both, phenocopying the gi mutant. This difference between the gi and lhy mutants suggests that the effect of GI on rhythm robustness at high temperature functions via a mechanism that is less dependent on LHY than the effect on circadian period. Simulating the effects of temperature by altering LHY and Y expression showed that these counterbalancing effects were largely sufficient to replicate the observed effects of temperature on clock gene expression in the wild type. The simulations also confirmed that the effects of the gi mutation on the clock at all temperatures are consistent with the identification of GI as part of Y. Temperature, in fact, will affect many processes in addition to LHY and Y transcription rates (potentially, all 61 kinetic parameters in the model). Obtaining simulations that exactly fit the data would likely require all of the parameters to be estimated afresh for each temperature. To constrain the estimation, most of the experimental results that were used in developing the original model would also have to be replicated at 12 and 27°C. The current clock model must also be extended to account for our temperature-specific data. For example, LHY and CCA1 were modeled as a single gene and must be separated to explore the differences in their functions at high and low temperature.
This role of GI in extending the temperature range over which robust rhythms can be maintained is analogous to that of the two alternatively spliced forms of the Neurospora clock gene FRQ, FRQ1-989 and FRQ100-989 (Garceau et al., 1997
Previously, it was demonstrated that the flowering phenotype of gi mutants is temperature-independent, with the exception of gi-2 (Araki and Komeda, 1993
Here, we have shown that GI plays a critical role in temperature compensation of the clock and in extending the range of temperatures at which rhythmicity can be maintained. We recently demonstrated that having a robust and accurate clock increases photosynthesis and productivity in Arabidopsis (Dodd et al., 2005
Plant Material Arabidopsis thaliana gi-11 was isolated in a screen of T-DNA insertion lines described by Richardson et al. (1998)
Growth Conditions
Rhythm Analysis
RNA Analysis
The UBQ10 and LHY primers have been described previously (Czechowski et al., 2004
Computational Methods
Accession Numbers
Supplemental Data
This research was initiated in A.J.M.'s group at the University of Warwick and pursued in A.H.'s group at the University of Liverpool. A.H. and C.L. carried out the leaf movement analysis in Liverpool, A.H. in Warwick. A.H. and P.D.G. carried out the luciferase analysis of the gi mutants and cca1 and lhy mutants in Liverpool, A.H. and M.M.S. in Warwick. Real-time PCR was performed by P.D.G. Modeling work was carried out by J.C.W.L. The gi-611 and gi-596 mutants were isolated in a screen performed by M.M.S., S.H., A.H., and S.J.D., and the flowering-time measurement was carried out by J.P. We are grateful to Victoria Hibberd and Nazir Sharrif for expert technical assistance in Warwick, to Ferenc Nagy and László Kozma-Bognár for sequencing the gi alleles, and to N. Bueno del Carpio for reading the manuscript. M.M.S. was supported by a PhD studentship from the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council (BBSRC), S.J.D. by a Department of Energy Fellowship of the Life Sciences Research Foundation, and S.H. in part by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. Research at Liverpool was funded by BBSRC Grant BBS/B/11125 and Royal Society Grant R4917/1 to A.H. Research at Warwick was funded by BBSRC Awards G08667, G13967, and G15231 to A.J.M.
The authors responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) are: Andrew J. Millar (andrew.millar{at}ed.ac.uk) and Anthony Hall (anthony.hall{at}liverpool.ac.uk).
[W] Online version contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.105.039990. Received December 1, 2005; Revision received February 23, 2006. accepted March 7, 2006.
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