1997
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.94.16.8515
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At GRP7, a nuclear RNA-binding protein as a component of a circadian-regulated negative feedback loop in Arabidopsis thaliana

Abstract: The endogenous clock that drives circadian rhythms is thought to communicate temporal information within the cell via cycling downstream transcripts. A transcript encoding a glycine-rich RNA-binding protein, Atgrp7, in Arabidopsis thaliana undergoes circadian oscillations with peak levels in the evening. The AtGRP7 protein also cycles with a time delay so that Atgrp7 transcript levels decline when the AtGRP7 protein accumulates to high levels. After AtGRP7 protein concentration has fallen to trough levels, Atg… Show more

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Cited by 227 publications
(219 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…VVD is strongly temperature regulated, and data presented here and in previously reported studies suggest that it is part of an autoregulatory feedback loop Elvin et al 2005). Slave oscillatory feedback loops have been described in other circadian systems (Heintzen et al 1997;Staiger et al 2003;Kornmann et al 2007), but whether they play a role in certain aspects of temperature compensation is not known.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…VVD is strongly temperature regulated, and data presented here and in previously reported studies suggest that it is part of an autoregulatory feedback loop Elvin et al 2005). Slave oscillatory feedback loops have been described in other circadian systems (Heintzen et al 1997;Staiger et al 2003;Kornmann et al 2007), but whether they play a role in certain aspects of temperature compensation is not known.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…However, McCCR1/2 transcript levels do cycle in CAM leaves under driven LD conditions, so it is clear that McCCR1/2 may be specifically uncoupled from its clock in CAM-induced leaves. In Arabidopsis, AtCCR2 expression is controlled in part by its own protein in a suboscillator feedback loop (Heintzen et al, 1997). This makes it possible that the autoregulation of McCCR1/2 is lost in salt-stressed, CAM-induced leaves even though the central clock itself is largely compensated against stress and continues to operate robustly in CAM-induced leaves.…”
Section: Discussion Circadian Clock Genes In M Crystallinummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Under short days, only a marginal rhythm is seen for CCR2:LUC in elf4-1; however, a weak rhythm that apparently is able to anticipate dusk is seen in long photoperiod conditions (Fig. 4, E and F), suggesting that the slave oscillator of CCR2 (Heintzen et al, 1997) still runs under these conditions even in the elf4-1 mutant. Again, the same phase of the CCR2 peak was seen in ELF4-ox plants compared to wild type (Fig.…”
Section: Entrainment To Ld Cycles Is Altered In Elf4-1 Mutantsmentioning
confidence: 96%