Affiliation:
1. The authors are in the Department of Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755–3844, USA.
Abstract
Circadian rhythmicity is universally associated with the ability to perceive light, and the oscillators (“clocks”) giving rise to these rhythms, which are feedback loops based on transcription and translation, are reset by light. Although such loops must contain elements of positive and negative regulation, the clock genes analyzed to date—
frq
in
Neurospora
and
per
and
tim
in
Drosophila
—are associated only with negative feedback and their biochemical functions are largely inferred. The
white collar–1
and
white collar–2
genes, both global regulators of photoresponses in
Neurospora
, encode DNA binding proteins that contain PAS domains and are believed to act as transcriptional activators. Data shown here suggest that
wc-1
is a clock-associated gene and
wc-2 is
a clock component; both play essential roles in the assembly or operation of the
Neurospora
circadian oscillator. Thus DNA binding and transcriptional activation can now be associated with a clock gene that may provide a positive element in the feedback loop. In addition, similarities between the PAS-domain regions of molecules involved in light perception and circadian rhythmicity in several organisms suggest an evolutionary link between ancient photoreceptor proteins and more modern proteins required for circadian oscillation.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Cited by
477 articles.
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