Publication | Open Access
Circadian Rhythms in the Thermophilic Cyanobacterium <i>Thermosynechococcus elongatus</i> : Compensation of Period Length over a Wide Temperature Range
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Citations
23
References
2004
Year
PhotobiologyMolecular BiologyCryptochromeWide Temperature RangeCyanobacteriaPhototropinBioluminescenceMicrobial EcologyPhotosynthesisBioluminescence Reporter GeneCircadian RhythmHealth SciencesPhotochemistryXl LuxabCircadian RhythmsPeriod LengthCircadian BiologyBiologyPlant Circadian ClockPsba1 GeneBiotechnologyMicrobiologyMedicineChronobiology
Proteins derived from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1, which performs plant-type oxygenic photosynthesis, are suitable for biochemical, biophysical, and X-ray crystallographic studies. We developed an automated bioluminescence real-time monitoring system for the circadian clock in the thermophilic cyanobacterium T. elongatus BP-1 that uses a bacterial luciferase gene set (Xl luxAB) derived from Xenorhabdus luminescens as a bioluminescence reporter gene. A promoter region of the psbA1 gene of T. elongatus was fused to the Xl luxAB gene set and inserted into a specific targeting site in the genome of T. elongatus. The bioluminescence from the cells of the psbA1-reporting strain was measured by an automated monitoring apparatus with photomultiplier tubes. The strain exhibited the circadian rhythms of bioluminescence with a 25-h period length for at least 10 days in constant light and temperature. The rhythms were reset by light-dark cycle, and their period length was almost constant over a wide range of temperatures (30 to 60 degrees C). Theses results indicate that T. elongatus has the circadian clock that is widely temperature compensated.
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