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Heat the Clock: Entrainment and Compensation in Arabidopsis Circadian Rhythms Cover

Heat the Clock: Entrainment and Compensation in Arabidopsis Circadian Rhythms

Open Access
|May 2019

Abstract

The circadian clock is a biological mechanism that permits some organisms to anticipate daily environmental variations. This clock generates biological rhythms, which can be reset by environmental cues such as cycles of light or temperature, a process known as entrainment. After entrainment, circadian rhythms typically persist with approximately 24 hours periodicity in free-running conditions, i.e. in the absence of environmental cues. Experimental evidence also shows that a free-running period close to 24 hours is maintained across a range of temperatures, a process known as temperature compensation. In the plant Arabidopsis, the effect of light on the circadian system has been widely studied and successfully modelled mathematically. However, the role of temperature in periodicity, and the relationship between entrainment and compensation, are not fully understood. Here we adapt recent models to incorporate temperature dependence by applying Arrhenius equations to the parameters of the models that characterize transcription, translation, and degradation rates. We show that the resulting models can exhibit thermal entrainment and temperature compensation, but that these phenomena emerge from physiologically different sets of processes. Further simulations combining thermal and photic forcing in more realistic scenarios clearly distinguish between the processes of entrainment and compensation, and reveal temperature compensation as an emergent property which can arise as a result of multiple temperature-dependent interactions. Our results consistently point to the thermal sensitivity of degradation rates as driving compensation and entrainment across a range of conditions.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/jcr.179 | Journal eISSN: 1740-3391
Language: English
Submitted on: Feb 18, 2019
Accepted on: Apr 19, 2019
Published on: May 14, 2019
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2019 Paula A. Avello, Seth J. Davis, James Ronald, Jonathan W. Pitchford, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.