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Journal of Bacteriology, June 1999, p. 3516-3524, Vol. 181, No. 11
Department of Biology, Texas A&M University,
College Station, Texas 77843-3258,1 and
Department of Biology, Nagoya University, Chikusa, Nagoya
464-01, Japan2
Received 6 January 1999/Accepted 31 March 1999
We generated random mutations in Synechococcus sp.
strain PCC 7942 to look for genes of output pathways in the
cyanobacterial circadian system. A derivative of transposon
Tn5 was introduced into the chromosomes of reporter strains
in which cyanobacterial promoters drive the Vibrio harveyi
luxAB genes and produce an oscillation of bioluminescence as a
function of circadian gene expression. Among low-amplitude mutants, one
mutant, tnp6, had an insertion in a 780-bp open reading frame. The tnp6
mutation produced an altered circadian phasing phenotype in the
expression rhythms of psbAI::luxAB,
psbAII::luxAB, and
kaiA::luxAB but had no or little
effect on those of psbAIII::luxAB,
purF::luxAB,
kaiB::luxAB, rpoD2::luxAB,
ndhD::luxAB, and
conII::luxAB. This suggests that the
interrupted gene in tnp6, named cpmA (circadian phase
modifier), is part of a circadian output pathway that regulates the
expression rhythms of psbAI, psbAII, and
kaiA.
Circadian (daily) rhythms are
ubiquitous regulatory functions, found in organisms from bacteria to
mammals, that control various biological activities including behavior,
metabolism, and gene expression (2, 12, 27, 32). The
mechanism of the circadian clock has not been clarified. However, clock
function can be modeled as having three common constituents: input
pathways, a central oscillator, and output pathways (16).
Light and temperature are the environmental stimuli recognized most
commonly to act through input pathways to synchronize the phase of the
circadian rhythm with environmental cycles. The central oscillator
generates and sustains an oscillation that has an approximately 24-h
period. The endogenous circadian oscillation is coupled to
clock-controlled processes through output pathways.
Several genes that are involved in circadian clock function have been
identified in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942. Complementation of altered period and arrhythmic mutants and
sequence analysis of the relevant loci revealed that all of the mutants
carried a point (missense) mutation in one of three genes, designated
kaiA, kaiB, and kaiC, which are
clustered in the Synechococcus genome (15). Gene
disruption and overexpression experiments suggest that the
kai genes encode central oscillator components. Another
gene, pex, was isolated by suppression of the short-period
mutant SP22 (21). Disruption of pex shortens the
circadian period and overexpression lengthens the period. The
pex product is thought to modulate function of the central clock oscillator. A mutation in the rpoD2 gene, which
encodes a group 2 Random insertion of promoterless luxAB genes, which encode
luciferase from Vibrio harveyi, into the
Synechococcus genome revealed robust gene expression rhythms
as an output of the circadian clock. The approximately 800 insertion
strains tested showed circadian oscillation of luciferase activity,
measured as bioluminescence, and none was clearly arrhythmic
(23). The genes were grouped into five categories ranging
from class 1 to class 5 according to the waveforms of the
bioluminescence rhythms: class 1 to class 3 rhythms have symmetrical
waveforms but peak in different phases, whereas the others have
asymmetric waveforms which are saw-toothed (class 4) or show bimodal
peaks per cycle (class 5). These results suggest that there are several
pathways of output from the circadian oscillator in this
cyanobacterium, each of which generates a customized pattern of
circadian expression for its target subset of genes.
Growth competition experiments have suggested that the different phase
relationships of the expression of various genes may be important for
optimal fitness (26). The relative phasing of circadian
oscillations is described by the phase angle of each, or the time
between the last synchronizing light-dark cycle and the peak or trough
of the endogenous rhythm (27). One goal of our research is
to map the output pathways responsible for the different phase angles
of the expression rhythms in the Synechococcus genome.
We isolated a transposon-generated mutant of Synechococcus
sp. strain PCC 7942, tnp6, which is affected in both amplitude and
phasing of the psbAI::luxAB circadian
expression rhythm. We examined the mutation's effect on circadian
expression rhythms for several other genes and assigned a function of
the tnp6 gene, renamed cpmA (circadian phase modifier), to
an output pathway of the cyanobacterial circadian clock. Surprisingly,
inactivation of cpmA dramatically changed the circadian
phasing of promoter activity for one of the genes thought to encode a
central clock component (kaiA::luxAB),
but it had little or no effect on that which drives the other two clock
genes (kaiB::luxAB). The net effect is
a dramatic phase angle difference between these two gene expression
oscillations. These data suggest that the coordinated expression of the
kai genes is not essential for circadian timekeeping in
Synechococcus.
Strains and culture conditions.
The bacterial strains and
plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1. All reporter strains were derived from
Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 by introducing
luxAB fusions into the chromosome at neutral site I (NSI
[6]) or, for
purF::luxAB and in AMC393, at neutral
site II (NSII [1]).
ndhD::luxAB was introduced as a
duplication at the native ndhD locus. All reporter genes are transcriptional fusions except two: kaiA and
psbAII are translationally fused to luxA in
AMC509 and AMC520, respectively. All Synechococcus strains
were grown on modified BG-11 medium (BG-11M [5]), in liquid cultures or on agar plates (11), under continuous
light (LL) at 30°C. Chloramphenicol (7.5 and 17 µg/ml) and/or
spectinomycin (5 µg/ml and 20 µg/ml) was added to select for NSI
and NSII targeting vectors in Synechococcus and in
Escherichia coli, respectively. The tnp6 mutants were
selected in the presence of either kanamycin (5 µg/ml for the
psbAI::luxAB,
psbAII::luxAB,
psbAIII::luxAB, kaiA::luxAB,
kaiB::luxAB,
rpoD2::luxAB, and
conII::luxAB strains) or spectinomycin
(10 µg/ml for the ndhD::luxAB
strain).
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
cpmA, a Gene Involved in an Output
Pathway of the Cyanobacterial Circadian System

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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
70-like transcription factor, causes a
low-amplitude phenotype in the psbAI gene's expression
rhythm (34). A similar phenotype was observed for one other
gene, ndhD, but the expression rhythms of several other
genes were not affected by the mutation. The specificity of the
mutation for a subset of genes indicates that the rpoD2 gene
is a component of an output pathway in the Synechococcus circadian clock.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
TABLE 1.
Strains and plasmids
Transposon mutagenesis.
pAM1037, which is a derivative of
pRL1058 (36), was introduced into Synechococcus
by conjugal transfer from E. coli (1). AMC149, a
psbAI::luxAB reporter strain of
Synechococcus (19), was grown to an optical
density at 750 nm of 0.5. Cells from a 100-ml sample were harvested by
centrifugation at 2,000 × g and resuspended in 10 ml
of fresh BG-11M. Ten-milliliter overnight cultures of E. coli AM1452, which carries the helper plasmid pRL528 and the
transposon plasmid pAM1037, and of E. coli AM1460, which carries the conjugal plasmid pRK2013, were each washed twice with 10 ml
of fresh Luria-Bertani (LB) medium and resuspended in 10 ml of sterile
water. Ten milliliters of Synechococcus cell suspension and
5 ml of each E. coli cell suspension were mixed, and
400-µl aliquots of the mixture were spread onto plates containing
BG-11M plus 5% LB medium (vol/vol) (1). The plates were
kept under dim light (10 to 30 µE · m
2 · s
1) at 30°C for 24 h. Kanamycin was underlaid
beneath the agar (11) for a final concentration of 50 µg/ml, and the plates were incubated at 30°C under 250 µE
· m
2 · s
1 for 4 weeks.
Km-resistant (Kmr) transformants were streaked onto fresh
BG-11M-kanamycin (50 µg/ml) plates, incubated for an additional 2 weeks, and then inoculated into 250 µl of BG-11 liquid medium
containing 5 µg of kanamycin/ml in 96-well microtiter plates.
Cloning and sequencing of the tnp6 region. Restriction enzymes and most modifying enzymes were purchased from Promega and used as directed by the manufacturer. Recovery of the transposon is described in the Results section. One cosmid clone, P2-C3, was isolated from a cosmid library of Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 by DNA hybridization with a probe made from the flanking region of the recovered transposon (3). An EcoRI fragment of 0.9 kb which hybridized to the probe was cloned into the EcoRI site of pUC18 to produce pAM2086. We used this plasmid as a template for sequencing the tnp6 locus. Insert DNA was sequenced on both strands by using the cycle sequencing method (dye terminator cycle sequencing ready reaction, ABI PRISM; PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.).
Construction of plasmids for disruption and complementation of
cpmA.
We digested pAM2086 with NruI and inserted
a 2.0-kb HincII fragment from pSKS101, including the
Kmr gene, to produce pAM2087 (see Fig. 2B). We used pAM2087
to create the cpmA null mutation in
psbAI::luxAB,
psbAII::luxAB,
psbAIII::luxAB, kaiA::luxAB,
kaiB::luxAB,
purF::luxAB,
rpoD2::luxAB, and
conII::luxAB reporter strains. We
digested pAM2086 with NruI and inserted a 2.1-kb
SmaI fragment from pHP45
(28), which carries
the spectinomycin-streptomycin resistance
fragment (Spr
fragment), to produce pAM2088. We used this plasmid to introduce the
cpmA mutation into the
ndhD::luxAB reporter strain, which already encodes Kmr (34).
Overexpression of cpmA.
A DNA fragment which includes
the initiation codon and N-terminal coding portion of the
cpmA gene was amplified by PCR with the primer set
5'-GTGCTCATGATTGATTCACAG-3' (AMO282) and
5'-CCTGAAGTCGGGGAATGCG-3' (AMO283). This 288-bp fragment was
made blunt ended by T4 DNA polymerase and cloned into the
EcoRV site of pBR322; a 0.3-kb BanII fragment of
this plasmid was then replaced by the 1.1-kb BanII fragment
of pAM2086 to complete the gene and produce pAM2107. A 0.9-kb
EcoRI fragment was removed from pAM2107, blunted with T4 DNA
polymerase, digested with BspHI, and cloned into
NcoI-SmaI sites of pAM1825 to produce pAM2108.
pAM1825 is an NSI targeting vector that includes the
lacIq gene, the
isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-inducible trc promoter, and a Shine-Dalgarno ribosome-binding sequence
(30). pAM2108 was introduced into the
psbAI::luxAB reporter strain AMC543 to
produce AMC550. For induction of cpmA expression, samples
were inoculated onto BG-11M agar pads containing 1 mM IPTG (Research Products International Corp., Mt. Prospect, Ill.), incubated in LL for
24 h, and entrained by a 12-h dark pulse before bioluminescence measurement began.
Assay of bioluminescence rhythms. The original tnp6 mutant was identified by continuous bioluminescence monitoring of Tn5-generated mutants by using a turntable apparatus described previously (20). The genetic background, AMC149, carried psbAI::luxAB; decanal was added exogenously in the vapor phase as a substrate for luciferase (20). When the mutation was recreated in AMC149 and other reporter strains, long-chain aldehyde production was engineered in vivo by insertion of the luxCDE genes of Xenorhabdus luminescens, driven by the psbAI promoter, at NSII (1). Cultures grown on BG-11M agar in LL were inoculated onto BG-11M agar in 96-well microtiter plates. An antibiotic (kanamycin or spectinomycin, as appropriate) was included in the agar for monitoring of cpmA-inactivated strains. These sample plates were incubated for 24 h under standard LL conditions and then subjected to a 12-h dark interval to synchronize the clocks of all cells in the population. Bioluminescence rhythms were measured by using a Packard TopCount luminometer (1). Measurements of bioluminescence from firefly luciferase fusions were performed similarly, except that the reporter strains did not carry luxCDE genes for aldehyde production; luciferin (Biosynth International, Naperville, Ill.) was added to the top of the agar in each well for a final concentration of 190 nM.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The cpmA gene sequence was entered into the GenBank database (accession no. AF117208).
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RESULTS |
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Isolation of the mutant tnp6. We generated random transposon mutations in a bioluminescent reporter strain of Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 (AMC149) to isolate mutants affected in circadian clock function. The transposon was delivered by conjugal transfer from E. coli of pAM1037, which carries a Tn5 derivative to which the tandem rbcL and glnA promoters of Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 have been added at one end of the transposon (1). In addition to simple gene disruption, the modified Tn5 can, theoretically, cause the over- or underexpression of adjacent genes by the activities of these strong outward-reading promoters. The modified Tn5 also bears a p15A replication origin to facilitate recovery in E. coli after genomic insertion (36). AMC149 carries a reporter gene in which the promoter region of psbAI, which encodes form I of the photosystem II D1 protein, is fused to promoterless luxAB genes of V. harveyi (19). AMC149 shows a circadian bioluminescence rhythm that has peaks at subjective dusk and troughs at subjective dawn (Fig. 1A). Among approximately 3,000 independent Kmr exconjugants, we identified a mutant, tnp6, which showed both a low-amplitude oscillation and an early-phase-angle phenotype (Fig. 1B).
|
2 · s
1. Under stronger light conditions (250 to 300 µE
· m
2 · s
1) or in liquid media,
revertants that showed wild-type color and growth rate and normal
phasing and amplitude of circadian bioluminescence oscillation were
readily obtained. We routinely maintained tnp6 mutant strains by
streaking on BG-11M agar medium with selective antibiotics under light
at 100 to 150 µE · m
2 · s
1,
and we did not observe reversion of any of the mutant phenotypes under
these conditions.
Sequencing the tnp6 locus and determining the insertion site of the transposon. We determined the insertion site of Tn5 from the recovered transposon-based plasmid using a primer that is complementary to one end of the transposon and reads outward into the flanking Synechococcus DNA. The wild-type locus was isolated from a cosmid library by using the recovered tnp6 plasmid as a probe. Southern hybridization against DNA from the cosmid clone indicated that the transposon inserted into the chromosome in a region, of which we subsequently determined the nucleotide sequence, bounded by EcoRI sites 0.9 kb apart (Fig. 2A). The EcoRI fragment included a 780-bp open reading frame (ORF). Comparison with the sequence we obtained from the recovered transposon showed that the insertion occurred at nucleotide 34 of this ORF. The direction of transcription of the tandem glnA and rbcL promoters on the transposon was the same as that of the 780-bp ORF. We designated this ORF the cpmA gene (circadian phase modifier).
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Regeneration and complementation of the tnp6 mutation. The transposon inserted close to the initiation codon (position 12 in the amino acid sequence) of cpmA and the direction of transcription from the strong glnA-rbcL promoter on the transposon were the same as those of cpmA (Fig. 2A). Therefore, it was considered possible that the phenotype of tnp6 was caused either by overexpression of a portion of cpmA or by interference with the transcription of a downstream gene. To exclude these possibilities, we generated a cpmA null mutation by replacement of the internal NruI fragment with a Kmr cartridge in the psbAI::luxAB reporter strain; the orientation of the Kmr gene was reversed relative to that of cpmA (Fig. 2B). This mutant (Fig. 4B) showed the same circadian phenotype as the original tnp6 mutant (Fig. 1B). This result confirmed that disruption of expression, rather than overexpression, can cause the phenotype.
|
Effect of cpmA inactivation on the circadian expression
rhythms of other genes.
Most, if not all, genes in
Synechococcus show a circadian rhythm of expression, and the
majority of these rhythms are in the same phase, having a peak at
subjective dusk and a trough at subjective dawn (class 1 rhythm)
(23). Exceptionally, the expression rhythm of
purF, which encodes a regulatory enzyme in the de novo
purine synthetic pathway, glutamine phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate
amidotransferase, shows a rhythm with an opposite phase (class 2)
(22). We were interested in whether mutation of
cpmA affects the expression rhythms of different genes in
Synechococcus in the same way. We introduced the
cpmA disruption into several reporter strains in which
luxAB is driven by the following promoters:
psbAII and psbAIII, which encode form II of the
photosystem II reaction center D1 protein (10, 29);
purF; kaiA and kaiB, which encode
circadian clock component proteins (15); ndhD,
which encodes subunit D of NADH dehydrogenase (34);
rpoD2, which encodes a group 2
70-like
transcription factor that has been shown to influence the expression
rhythm of psbAI (34); and the artificial
promoter, conII, whose sequence matches the E. coli
35 and
10 elements (9).
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Overexpression of cpmA. An IPTG-inducible promoter was used to drive expression of an ectopic copy of cpmA in an otherwise wild-type psbAI::luxAB reporter strain. No alteration of the wild-type circadian bioluminescence pattern was observed in either the presence or absence of IPTG (data not shown).
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DISCUSSION |
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We concluded that cpmA is involved in an output pathway of the circadian clock, rather than an input pathway or the central oscillator itself, from the following observations. Mutation of cpmA altered the phasing of the circadian rhythm for a subset of genes; it changed the phase angles of the psbAI, psbAII, and kaiA expression rhythms dramatically, but it had little effect on those of psbAIII, purF, rpoD2, ndhD, and conII. Theoretically, a change in the central oscillator should be reflected in all downstream behaviors. Also, cpmA inactivation did not affect the phase of the expression rhythm of the kaiB promoter, which directs a dicistronic message that encodes KaiB and KaiC. It has been suggested that KaiC functions as a central clock component in this organism because disruption of kaiC eliminates the circadian rhythm, missense mutations in kaiC change the periods of all gene expression rhythms in the cell, and pulsed overexpression of kaiC can shift the phase of the circadian rhythm (15).
It is surprising that the cpmA mutation dramatically changed the phase of the kaiA expression rhythm (phase angle difference of approximately 10 h) but had a very minor effect on the phase of the kaiB expression rhythm. Disruption of kaiA eliminates the circadian rhythm of kaiBC expression, and overexpression of kaiA leads to high-level and low-amplitude expression of kaiBC, suggesting that kaiA functions as an activator of the kaiBC promoter (15). Furthermore, some period-altering mutations map to kaiA, which is one criterion for its role as a central clock component; if it is such a component, the relative concentrations of KaiA and KaiC at different times during the circadian cycle should be important for sustaining the rhythm. In the cpmA mutant background, the kaiA and kaiB promoters are out of phase by 8 h or more. Our results indicate that synchronization of the phase of the circadian expression rhythms of kaiA and kaiBC may not be necessary for normal clock function.
It is not clear that the early-phase-angle and low-amplitude phenotypes are closely related. Changes in amplitude resulting from cpmA inactivation were less reproducible than the early-phase-angle phenotype. Both phenotypes were always observed in the psbAI reporter strain. However, the low-amplitude phenotype was not reproducibly observed in the psbAII and kaiA rhythms, even though their phasing was affected by the mutation. Furthermore, sometimes the low-amplitude phenotype was observed in the expression rhythms of psbAIII, kaiB, and conII, whose phases were not markedly affected by the mutation. For the purF rhythm, this mutation reliably increased the amplitude of the oscillation.
In this organism the expression of the conII promoter
fragment, an entirely heterologous sequence that includes the consensus elements recognized by the E. coli
70
subunit, shows circadian oscillation with class 1 phase and waveform. This result suggests that the class 1 rhythm is generated through the
basic transcription machinery as an original mode of the circadian expression rhythm and that other components in specific output pathways
modify this rhythm to generate the different waveforms represented by
the different classes (23). Mutation of cpmA dramatically affected the phase relationships of a subset of class 1 gene expression rhythms, those of psbAI, psbAII
and kaiA, but had only a modest effect on the phase angles
of the conII expression rhythm or other class 1 rhythms,
such as those of psbAIII, kaiB, ndhD,
and rpoD2. This indicates that the category of class 1, identified as constituting up to 85% of the expression patterns of the
genome, actually encompasses two or more subclasses that are controlled
by different output pathways. Mutation of cpmA did not
affect the phase of the class 2 purF expression rhythm, which is opposite in phase to class 1. This confirms the separation of
class 2 from class 1 as being controlled by independent output pathways. In all, our results indicate that cpmA functions
in an output pathway that modulates the phasing (and amplitude) of a
subset of class 1 rhythms.
Another Synechococcus gene, rpoD2, was previously
identified as a component of an output pathway of the circadian clock
(34). Disruption of rpoD2 decreases the amplitude
of the psbAI expression rhythm. The rpoD2
sequence predicts a product that is a group 2
factor of RNA
polymerase. Generally, cyanobacteria have, in addition to a group 1
factor which is essential for exponential growth, multiple group 2 sigmas that are dispensable but have extensive sequence similarity to
the group 1
factor. Tsinoremas et al. suggested a model in which
temporal incorporation of the RpoD2 sigma factor into RNA polymerase
decreases the expression of psbAI during subjective night
and generates the high-amplitude circadian oscillation of
psbAI expression (34). Inactivation of
rpoD2 decreases the amplitude of the expression rhythm of
ndhD as well as that of psbAI but does not affect
the purF expression rhythm (34). The effect of
the cpmA mutation was different in that it affected phase as
well as amplitude of the psbAI rhythm and separated
ndhD and psbAI into separate subclasses.
Constitutive high expression of cpmA did not affect the phase or amplitude of the psbAI expression rhythm. This result suggests that temporal oscillations in the amount of the cpmA product are not necessary to determine the correct amplitude and phase. This contrasts with the case of components that are involved in circadian output pathways in other organisms. The expression of the Atgrp7 gene, encoding a glycine-rich RNA-binding protein of Arabidopsis thaliana, shows circadian oscillation in its mRNA and protein levels; overexpression of AtGRP7 greatly suppresses and eliminates the circadian oscillation of Atgrp7 expression (14). In another example, the lark gene of Drosophila melanogaster encodes an RNA-binding protein that is thought to function as a negative repressor of the circadian eclosion rhythm (24). lark/+ heterozygotes, which have a decreased amount of Lark protein, have an early-eclosion phenotype, and an increase in gene dosage of lark causes a late-eclosion phenotype. In both cases the overexpression of the output component disrupts the normal circadian output pathway.
Database searches revealed that a cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, and three species of Archaea, M. janaschii, M. thermoautotrophicum, and A. fulgidus, have a gene that is very similar to cpmA. It is interesting that all of these organisms have a putative kaiC homolog. Because KaiC may function as a central clock component in the circadian system of Synechococcus, it is possible that the kaiC genes in other prokaryotes also encode a clock component and that cpmA is a circadian output factor in those organisms as well. Because all of these organisms also carry purE homologs, we expect that CpmA will be found to function distinctly from PurE; however, it is likely to have a similar biochemical activity. The nature of this activity may be more apparent when the locus or loci that allow pseudoreversion of the cpmA phenotypes are identified.
Mutation of cpmA caused a severe growth defect in the cyanobacterium. One possible explanation is that its product is involved in basic cell metabolism. CpmA may have a carboxylase activity similar to that of PurE, such that its loss causes disruption of an unidentified metabolic pathway. Another possibility is that the detrimental effect on growth is a more direct result of a circadian role for CpmA because loss of this function causes a conflict among gene expression rhythms of different phases in this organism. In unicellular cyanobacteria some processes that are incompatible are known to be separated temporally. For example, in unicellular diazotrophic cyanobacteria, the oxygen-sensitive enzyme nitrogenase, which is irreversibly inactivated by exposure to oxygen, is expressed in the night, in phase opposite to those of expression rhythms of (oxygen-evolving) photosynthesis-related genes (12). In Synechococcus the expression rhythm of purF, which encodes the oxygen-sensitive enzyme glutamine phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate amidotransferase, is expressed in phase (class 2 phase) opposite to that of psbAI, which encodes the photosystem II reaction center D1 protein. Furthermore, bioluminescence patterns following random insertion of promoterless luxAB genes suggest that this organism has several genes expressed with a class 2 phase (23). It is possible that the activities of the enzymes which are specifically expressed in the night, like purF, are inhibited by the approach of the peak of a subset of class 1 rhythms, including the rhythms of the photosynthesis genes psbAI and psbAII, into their phase.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Yao Ouyang and Carl Johnson for the purF::luc and psbAI::luc reporter plasmids and Hiroshi Yamamoto and Norio Murata for the IPTG-inducible NSI-targeting vector entered into our strain collection and designated here as pAM1825. We also thank Vincent Cassone, Carl Johnson, and Stanly Williams for suggestions regarding the manuscript.
This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation to S.S.G. (MCB-9513367) and from the International Human Frontier Science Program to S.S.G. and T.K. (RG0385/1996-M with co-PIs C.H. Johnson and M. Ishiura) and by a JSPS fellowship to M.K.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dept. of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3258. Phone: (409) 845-9824. Fax: (409) 862-7659. E-mail: sgolden{at}tamu.edu.
Present address: Incyte Pharmaceuticals, Department of Informatics,
Palo Alto, CA 94304.
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