Biological rhythms are ubiquitous in eukaryotes, and the best understood
of these occur with a period of
approximately a day – circadian rhythms. Such rhythms persist even
when the organism is placed under constant
conditions, with a period that is close, but not exactly equal, to 24 h,
and are driven by an endogenous timer –
one of the many ‘biological clocks’. In plants, research into
circadian rhythms has been driven forward by genetic
experiments using Arabidopsis. Higher plant genomes include a
particularly large number of genes involved in
metabolism, and circadian rhythms may well provide the necessary coordination
for the control of these – for
example, around the diurnal rhythm of photosynthesis – to suit changing
developmental or environmental
conditions. The endogenous timer must be flexible enough to support these
requirements. Current research
supports this notion most strongly for the input pathway, in which multiple
photoreceptors have been shown to
mediate light input to the clock. Both input and output components are
now related to putative circadian oscillator
mechanisms by sequence homology or by experimental observation. It appears
that the pathways linking some
domains of the basic clock model may be very short indeed, or the mechanisms
of these domains may overlap.
Components of the first plant circadian output pathway to be identified
unequivocally will help to determine
exactly how many output pathways control the various phases of overt rhythms
in plants.