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The marine environment has unique properties of light transmission, with an attenuation of long wavelengths within the first meters of the water column. Marine organisms have therefore evolved specific blue‐light receptors such as aureochromes to absorb shorter‐wavelength light. Here, we identify and characterize a light, oxygen, or voltage sensing (LOV) containing histidine kinase (LOV‐HK) that functions as a new class of eukaryotic blue‐light receptor in the pico‐phytoplanktonic cell Ostreococcus tauri. This LOV‐HK is related to the large family of LOV‐HKs found in prokaryotes. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that the LOV domains from LOV‐HKs, including O. tauri LOV‐HK, and phototropins (phot; plant and green algal LOV serine/threonine kinases) have different evolutionary histories. Photochemical analysis shows that the LOV domain of LOV‐HK binds a flavin cofactor and absorbs blue light with a fast photocycle compared with its prokaryotic counterparts. Ostreococcus tauri LOV‐HK expression is induced by blue light and is under circadian control. Further, both overexpression and downregulation of LOV‐HK result in arrhythmia of the circadian reporter CCA1:Luc under constant blue light. In contrast, photochemical inactivation of O. tauri LOV‐HK is without effect, demonstrating its importance for function of the circadian clock under blue light. Overexpression/downregulation of O. tauriLOV‐HK alters CCA1 rhythmicity under constant red light, irrespective of LOV‐HK’s photochemical reactivity, suggesting that O. tauri LOV‐HK also participates in regulation of the circadian clock independent of its blue‐light‐sensing property. Molecular characterization of O. tauri LOV‐HK demonstrates that this type of photoreceptor family is not limited to prokaryotes.  相似文献   
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BACKGROUND: The green picoalga Ostreococcus tauri (Prasinophyceae), which has been described as the smallest free-living eukaryotic organism, has minimal cellular ultra-structure and a very small genome. In recent years, O. tauri has emerged as a novel model organism for systems biology approaches that combine functional genomics and mathematical modeling, with a strong emphasis on light regulated processes and circadian clock. These approaches were made possible through the implementation of a minimal molecular toolbox for gene functional analysis including overexpression and knockdown strategies. We have previously shown that the promoter of the High Affinity Phosphate Transporter (HAPT) gene drives the expression of a luciferase reporter at high and constitutive levels under constant light. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we report, using a luciferase reporter construct, that the HAPT promoter can be finely and reversibly tuned by modulating the level and nature of phosphate in culture medium. This HAPT regulation was additionally used to analyze the circadian clock gene Time of Cab expression 1 (TOC1). The phenotype of a TOC1ox/CCA1:Luc line was reverted from arrhythmic to rhythmic simply by adding phosphate to the culture medium. Furthermore, since the time of phosphate injection had no effect on the phase of CCA1:Luc expression, this study suggests further that TOC1 is a central clock gene in Ostreococcus. CONCLUSIONS/PERSPECTIVES: We have developed a phosphate-regulated expression system that allows fine gene function analysis in Ostreococcus. Recently, there has been a growing interest in microalgae as cell factories. This non-toxic phosphate-regulated system may prove useful in tuning protein expression levels quantitatively and temporally for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   
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Daylight is the primary cue used by circadian clocks to entrain to the day/night cycle so as to synchronize physiological processes with periodic environmental changes induced by Earth rotation. However, the temporal daylight pattern is not the same every day due to erratic weather fluctuations or regular seasonal changes. Then, how do circadian clocks operate properly in varying weather and seasons? In this paper, we discuss the strategy unveiled by recent studies of the circadian clock of Ostreococcus tauri, the smallest free‐living eukaryotic organism. It combines mechanisms controlling light inputs and clock sensitivity, shaping both the dynamics of the core circadian oscillator and its forcing by light so as to ensure stable and precise synchronization in all weather and seasons. Editor's suggested further reading in BioEssays: Another place, another timer: Marine species and the rhythms of life Abstract  相似文献   
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Living organisms such as plants and animals have evolved endogenous clocks in order to anticipate the environmental changes associated with the earth’s rotation and to orchestrate biological processes in the course of the 24 hour daily cycle. We have recently identified clock components in the primitive green picoalga Ostreococcus tauri, a promising minimal cellular and genomic model for systems biology approaches. A homologue of the Arabidopsis core clock gene Time of CAB expression-1 (TOC1) was shown to play a central role in Ostreococcus heralding an early emergence of clock components in the green lineage. Here we report the regulation of TOC1 at dusk in response to light and dark cues.Key words: Ostreococcus, circadian, clock, plants, microalgaeThe circadian clock is an autonomous timer, which provides for living organisms a means to measure time internally. As such the clock has two fundamental properties: (1) it allows the organism to anticipate daily predictable environmental changes such as light and temperature cycles; (2) it coordinates key physiological processes during the 24 hour daily cycle. As a result, internal time given by the clock and external time given by the photoperiod exhibit a stable phase relationship for a wide range of photoperiods during the course of the year. The clock is therefore also involved in regulating annual rhythms such as flowering (also called photoperiodism) and many clock mutants have been identified on the basis of abnormalities in the timing of flowering. Other clock genes, such as TOC1 were identified through screens for defects in the rhythmic expression of circadian-regulated genes such as the Light-harvesting complex (LHCB/CAB) gene.2In plants, the clock appears as a complex circuit relying on interconnected feedback loops, which are being studied through a combination of experimental and modelling approaches.3 However, circadian studies are complicated by cell-autonomous and tissue specific clockworks in multicellular plants. We have recently implemented tools for gene function, analysis in the very simple green cell Ostreococcus tauri.4 Amongst known core clock genes we identified two homologues of the plant clock genes TOC1 and CCA1 (Circadian Clock Associated 1). Furthermore we found that a conserved CCA1 binding site was required for the circadian expression of TOC1. TOC1 appears to play a more central role than CCA1 in the Ostreococcus clock since only TOC1 knock-down abolishes circadian function in constant light.4 In plants the dark-dependent degradation of TOC1 relies on the F box protein ZEITLUPE which is stabilized by GIGANTEA in blue light.5,6 We identified no ZEITLUPE AND GIGANTEA homologues in Ostreococcus. We chose, therefore to investigate the regulation of TOC1 in Ostreococcus at dusk since there are similarities between TOC1 functions and patterns of expression in Ostreococcus and Arabidopsis.  相似文献   
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