| Literature DB >> 33036236 |
Aida Maric1, Paloma Mas1,2.
Abstract
Circadian rhythms pervade nearly all aspects of plant growth, physiology, and development. Generation of the rhythms relies on an endogenous timing system or circadian clock that generates 24-hour oscillations in multiple rhythmic outputs. At its bases, the plant circadian function relies on dynamic interactive networks of clock components that regulate each other to generate rhythms at specific phases during the day and night. From the initial discovery more than 13 years ago of a parallelism between the oscillations in chromatin status and the transcriptional rhythms of an Arabidopsis clock gene, a number of studies have later expanded considerably our view on the circadian epigenome and transcriptome landscapes. Here, we describe the most recent identification of chromatin-related factors that are able to directly interact with Arabidopsis clock proteins to shape the transcriptional waveforms of circadian gene expression and clock outputs. We discuss how changes in chromatin marks associate with transcript initiation, elongation, and the rhythms of nascent RNAs, and speculate on future interesting research directions in the field.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis; chromatin; circadian clock; transcriptional rhythms
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036236 PMCID: PMC7601625 DOI: 10.3390/genes11101170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Schematic drawing depicting the basic regulatory network at the core of the Arabidopsis circadian oscillator. Oscillator genes are expressed at different phases during the day and night, from morning hours on the left on the central circle (clock) to evening hours on the right. Repression is depicted as red lines ending in small perpendicular dashes whereas activation is indicated by the green arrows. Clock components that interact to perform their regulatory function are encircled in grey line boxes. CCA1 and LHY are repressors of PRR genes, including TOC1. PRRs in turn repress the expression of CCA1 and LHY. Expression of Evening Complex (EC) components (LUX, ELF4, ELF3) is repressed by both CCA1/LHY and TOC1. The EC represses expression of PRR9, PRR7, and LUX. The regulatory network is dominated by repressive interactions, although recent studies have uncovered a number of activating factors such as LWD1/2 and RVE8, which activate the expression of multiple morning- and evening-expressed oscillator genes. Please consult the main text for further details.
List of the most recent findings connecting chromatin changes and circadian oscillator genes in Arabidopsis.
| Histone Mark | Clock/Chromatin-Related Factor | Regulated Clock Component | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acetylation | HAF2 |
| [ |
| Deacetylation | Sin3-HDAC |
| [ |
| ELF3-HDA9 |
| [ | |
| EC-HDA9-HOS15 |
| [ | |
| HDA6-CCA1/LHY |
| [ | |
| HDA6-TOC1 | [ | ||
| Methylation | SDG2 (ATXR3) |
| [ |
| RVE8/LNKs |
| [ | |
| Demethylation | JMJ14 |
| [ |
| CCA1/LHY-LDL1/2 |
| [ | |
| TOC1-LDL1/2 |
| [ | |
| JMJ13 |
| [ | |
| Monoubiquitination | HUB1/HUB2 |
| [ |
| Histone Variant H2A.Z | ELF3-SWR1 |
| [ |