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First published online May 30, 2008; 10.1105/tpc.108.200510 The Plant Cell 20:1187
Newly Isolated Circadian Clock Components Conserved across EukaryotesScience Editor jmach{at}aspb.org
Organisms maintain circadian rhythms that coordinate biological processes with daily environmental changes. The circadian clock molecular mechanism is self-sustaining, yet is also capable of entrainment to variable environmental conditions (reviewed in McClung, 2006 Martin-Tryon and Harmer (pages 1244–1259) investigate XAP5 CIRCADIAN TIMEKEEPER (XCT), which encodes a novel protein that may play a role in light input into the clock for the regulation of both circadian period and photomorphogenesis, but not flowering time. Loss-of-function xct mutants show a shorter circadian period under all light conditions but do not flower early. xct mutants also show photomorphogenesis defects, including delayed chloroplast development. Interestingly, different mutant phenotypes are sensitive to different wavelengths of light; for example, xct mutants have very long hypocotyls in red light but very short hypocotyls in blue light. By contrast, xct mutant sensitivity of circadian period to increasing intensities of light is increased in red light but not blue light. Thus, XCT appears to have both light-dependent and light-independent functions, and its light-dependent function inhibits red light inputs to the clock. XCT also may act on the oscillation mechanism in a light-independent manner, as its shortening of photoperiod phenotype appears in all light conditions, including complete darkness.
The XCT protein is nuclear localized (see figure
) and shows good conservation across eukaryotes, with identity between plant and mammalian proteins at nearly 50%. Another interesting nuclear-localized clock component that shows strong conservation across kingdoms is the FIONA1 (FIO1) protein, published in the February issue of The Plant Cell (Kim et al., 2008
Footnotes www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.200510 REFERENCES
Kim, J., Kim, Y., Yeom, M., Kim, J.H., and Nam, H.G. (2008). FIONA1 is essential for regulating period length in the Arabidopsis circadian clock. Plant Cell 20: 307–319. Martin-Tryon, E.L., and Harmer, S.L. (2008). XAP5 CIRCADIAN TIMEKEEPER coordinates light signals for proper timing of photomorphogenesis and the circadian clock in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 20: 1244–1259. McClung, C.R. (2006). Plant circadian rhythms. Plant Cell 18: 792–803. Related articles in Plant Cell:
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