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A spatial model of the plant circadian clock reveals design principles for coordinated timing
Authors:Mark Greenwood  Isao T Tokuda  James C W Locke
Affiliation:1. Sainsbury Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK ; 2. Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK ; 3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Ritsumeikan University, Kusatsu Japan ;4.Present address: Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge MA, USA
Abstract:Individual plant cells possess a genetic network, the circadian clock, that times internal processes to the day‐night cycle. Mathematical models of the clock are typically either “whole‐plant” that ignore tissue or cell type‐specific clock behavior, or “phase‐only” that do not include molecular components. To address the complex spatial coordination observed in experiments, here we implemented a clock network model on a template of a seedling. In our model, the sensitivity to light varies across the plant, and cells communicate their timing via local or long‐distance sharing of clock components, causing their rhythms to couple. We found that both varied light sensitivity and long‐distance coupling could generate period differences between organs, while local coupling was required to generate the spatial waves of clock gene expression observed experimentally. We then examined our model under noisy light‐dark cycles and found that local coupling minimized timing errors caused by the noise while allowing each plant region to maintain a different clock phase. Thus, local sensitivity to environmental inputs combined with local coupling enables flexible yet robust circadian timing.
Keywords:circadian clock   coordination   coupling   noise   plant
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