Article (Scientific journals)
EARLY FLOWERING4 Recruitment of EARLY FLOWERING3 in the Nucleus Sustains the Arabidopsis Circadian Clock
Herrero, Eva; Kolmos, Elsebeth; Bujdoso, Nora et al.
2012In Plant Cell, 24 (2), p. 428-443
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
 

Files


Full Text
EARLY FLOWERING4 Recruitment of EARLY FLOWERING3 in the Nucleus Sustains....pdf
Publisher postprint (1.72 MB)
Request a copy

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Abstract :
[en] The plant circadian clock is proposed to be a network of several interconnected feedback loops, and loss of any component leads to changes in oscillator speed. We previously reported that Arabidopsis thaliana EARLY FLOWERING4 (ELF4) is required to sustain this oscillator and that the elf4 mutant is arrhythmic. This phenotype is shared with both elf3 and lux. Here, we show that overexpression of either ELF3 or LUX ARRHYTHMO (LUX) complements the elf4 mutant phenotype. Furthermore, ELF4 causes ELF3 to form foci in the nucleus. We used expression data to direct a mathematical position of ELF3 in the clock network. This revealed direct effects on the morning clock gene PRR9, and we determined association of ELF3 to a conserved region of the PRR9 promoter. A cis-element in this region was suggestive of ELF3 recruitment by the transcription factor LUX, consistent with both ELF3 and LUX acting genetically downstream of ELF4. Taken together, using integrated approaches, we identified ELF4/ELF3 together with LUX to be pivotal for sustenance of plant circadian rhythms.
Disciplines :
Engineering, computing & technology: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
Herrero, Eva
Kolmos, Elsebeth
Bujdoso, Nora
Yuan, Ye
Wang, Mengmeng
Berns, Markus
Uhlworm, Heike
Coupland, George
Saini, Reena
Jaskolski, Mariusz
Webb, Alex
Goncalves, Jorge ;  University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB)
Davis, Seth
More authors (3 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
EARLY FLOWERING4 Recruitment of EARLY FLOWERING3 in the Nucleus Sustains the Arabidopsis Circadian Clock
Publication date :
February 2012
Journal title :
Plant Cell
ISSN :
1532-298X
Publisher :
American Society of Plant Biologists, Rockville, United States - Maryland
Volume :
24
Issue :
2
Pages :
428-443
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBilu :
since 10 March 2015

Statistics


Number of views
83 (0 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
0 (0 by Unilu)

Scopus citations®
 
235
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
191
OpenCitations
 
214
WoS citations
 
220

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu