Publication | Closed Access
The Circadian Clock in <i>Arabidopsis</i> Roots Is a Simplified Slave Version of the Clock in Shoots
259
Citations
23
References
2008
Year
Plant ClockBotanyGeneticsCryptochromeCircadian ClockPlant DevelopmentCircadian RhythmSimplified Slave VersionCircadian OscillatorGene ExpressionPlant HormoneCircadian BiologyBiologyPlant Circadian ClockDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesClock GenesMedicineChronobiologyPlant Physiology
The circadian oscillator in eukaryotes consists of several interlocking feedback loops through which the expression of clock genes is controlled. It is generally assumed that all plant cells contain essentially identical and cell-autonomous multiloop clocks. Here, we show that the circadian clock in the roots of mature Arabidopsis plants differs markedly from that in the shoots and that the root clock is synchronized by a photosynthesis-related signal from the shoot. Two of the feedback loops of the plant circadian clock are disengaged in roots, because two key clock components, the transcription factors CCA1 and LHY, are able to inhibit gene expression in shoots but not in roots. Thus, the plant clock is organ-specific but not organ-autonomous.
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