Mutants in the period-1 (prd-1) gene, characterized by a recessive allele, display a reduced growth rate and period lengthening of the developmental cycle controlled by the circadian clock. We re?ned the genetic location of prd-1 and used whole genome sequencing to ?nd the mutation de?ning it, con?rming the identity of prd-1 by rescuing the mutant circadian phenotype via transformation. PRD-1 is an RNA helicase whose orthologs, DDX5 and DDX17 in humans and Dbp2p in yeast, are implicated in various processes including transcriptional regulation, elongation, and termination, 23 ribosome biogenesis, and RNA decay. Although prdi-1smutantssiois an ATP-dependent RNA helicase, member of a sub-family display a long period (~25 hrs) circadian developmental cycle, they interestingly display a wild type period when the core circadian oscillator is tracked using a frq-luciferase transcriptional fusion under conditions of limiting nutritional carbon; the core oscillator runs with a long period under glucose-suf?cient conditions. Thus PRD-1 clearly impacts the circadian oscillator and is not only part of a metabolic oscillator ancillary to the core clock. PRD-1 is an essential protein and its expression is neither light-regulated nor clock-regulated. However, it is transiently induced by glucose; in the presence of suf?cient glucose PRD-1 is in the nucleus until glucose runs out which elicits its disappearance from the nucleus. Because circadian period length is carbon concentration-dependent, prdÂ-1 may be formally viewed as clock mutant with defective nutritional compensation of circadian period length.
Revised: July 20, 2020 |
Published: December 22, 2015
Citation
Emerson J.M., B.M. Bartholomai, C. Ringelberg, S.E. Baker, J.J. Loros, and J.C. Dunlap. 2015.period-1 encodes an ATP-dependent RNA helicase that influences nutritional compensation of the Neurospora circadian clock.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 112, no. 51:15707-15712.PNNL-SA-114898.doi:10.1073/pnas.1521918112