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A Conversation between Plants’ Daily and Aging Clocks 게시판 상세보기
Title A Conversation between Plants’ Daily and Aging Clocks
Embargo date 2018-08-05 12:00 Hits 2944
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A Conversation between Plants’ Daily and Aging Clocks

- Plants’ daily clock and leaf yellowing are intimately interwoven as the 24-hour cyclic rhythm and aging in animals -

Every day you get a day older. So do plants. While the biological daily clock ticks, time passes also for the aging clock. Scientists at the Center for Plant Aging Research, within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), have found out how the two clocks talk to each other genetically. Plants’ circadian clock - the 24-hour cyclic rhythm - plays a critical role in regulating aging, in particular in timing the yellowing of the leaves. As aging plants recycle nutrients for the new leaves and seeds, uncovering these timekeeping mechanisms is important to understand plant productivity.

Most organisms are influenced by the daily and annual cycle of light and temperature. The circadian clock functions as a “mastermind” to align many aspects of development and physiology with certain times of the year or the day.

In plants, the main gears of the daily clock are nine genes which have a peak in their biological activity either in the morning (morning complex) or in the early evening (evening complex). They work as a network and regulate plants’ growth and flowering. In this study published in PNAS, IBS researchers used plants deficient in one of these nine core circadian clock components at a time to study the effect on the aging clock.

In animals, the two biological clocks are interlinked; it was found that mutations in clock genes accelerate aging, and aging alters the circadian rhythmicity. However, the relationship between the aging and circadian clocks in plants has not been clarified yet. IBS researchers have used the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and determined that some daily clock genes are directly or indirectly related to aging.

To identify clock components directly involved in aging, the team examined the timing of leaf yellowing over time and in the dark, as darkness makes Arabidopsis age faster. Plants lacking three components (elf3, elf4, and lux) of the evening complex had yellow leaves sooner, whereas plants without the morning component PRR9 (PSEUDO-RESPONSE REGULATORS 9) remained green for longer showing delayed aging, in both age-dependent and dark-induced conditions. Then, the researchers found that PRR9 plays an important role in the expression of a key gene for plant senescence, known as ORE1. In this way, the two clocks interact with each other.


Figure 1: Daily clock genes affect yellowing of the leaves. Plants lacking one of the nine major genes that controls daily timekeeping experience earlier or delayed leaf senescence. Plants missing the key genes elf3-7, elf4-209 and lux-2 age faster than the normal plants (Col-0). In contrast, cca1-11, prr7-3, prr9-1, toc1-101, and gi-2 mutants showed delayed senescence. These results confirm that the biological daily clock is closely related to the control of senescence of leaves.

“Time controls aging, but the question is how do plants recognize the passage of time through their lifespan? We found out that plant’s daily oscillatory clock interacts with the aging linear clock during their lifetime.” explains NAM Hong Gil, the Center research director and corresponding co-author.


Figure 2: A network of feedforward loops connects plants’ aging and daily oscillatory clocks. IBS scientists confirmed that a core component of the daily clock, PSEUDO-RESPONSE REGULATOR 9 (PRR9), controls the expression of the aging regulator, ORE1 gene. More specifically, PRR9 promotes ORE1 via direct transcriptional activation and indirectly by suppressing miR164, a post-transcriptional repressor of ORE1. The results of this study indicate that, plants’ circadian clock and leaf senescence are intimately interwoven as are the daily clock and aging in animals.

In the future, the team would like to extend the network and understand how the circadian clock and aging interact with the external environment. Finally, the team would like to take advantage of the aging clock for regulating age-dependent developmental processes.

Letizia Diamante

Notes for editors

- References
Hyunmin Kim, Hyo Jung Kim, Quy Thi Vu, Sukjoon Jung, C. Robertson McClung, Sunghyun Hong, and Hong Gil Nam. Circadian control of ORE1 by PRR9 positively regulates leaf senescence in Arabidopsis. PNAS (2018). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1722407115.

- Media Contact
For further information or to request media assistance, please contact: Mr. Kyungyoon Min, Head of Communications Team, Institute for Basic Science (IBS) (+82-42-878-8156, kymin@ibs.re.kr); or Ms. Carol Kim, Global Officer, Communications Team, IBS (+82-42-878-8133, clitie620@ibs.re.kr).

- About the Institute for Basic Science (IBS)
IBS was founded in 2011 by the government of the Republic of Korea with the sole purpose of driving forward the development of basic science in South Korea. IBS has launched 28 research centers as of March 2018. There are nine physics, one mathematics, six chemistry, eight life science, one earth science, and three interdisciplinary research centers.

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