The daily rhythms that adapt organisms to the solar cycle are driven by internal circadian clocks. The hypothesis that the core pacemakers of these clocks consist of auto-regulatory transcriptional/post-translational feedback loops (TTFLs) was first developed in flies and fungi and has now been extended successfully to describe circadian timing mechanisms in mammals and plants. TTFL models revolve around the protein products of ‘clock’ genes that feedback periodically to regulate their own expression. From this simple beginning, the models have been expanded to encompass multiple, interlinked loops. However, experimental data now highlight the limitations of the TTFL model. Until recently, the focus on transcription caused rhythms in cytoso...
The circadian clock is the internal timekeeper of plants. This clock regulates most aspects of plant...
AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cyc...
How do cells perceive time? Do cells use temporal information to regulate the production/degradation...
The daily rhythms that adapt organisms to the solar cycle are driven by internal circadian clocks. T...
Cyanobacteria are the only model circadian clock system in which a circadian oscillator can be recon...
Cyanobacteria are the only model circadian clock system in which a circadian oscillator can be recon...
SummaryCyanobacteria have become a major model system for analyzing circadian rhythms. The temporal ...
The remarkably stable circadian oscillations of single cyanobacteria enable a population of growing ...
Circadian clocks have evolved to synchronise an organism's physiology with the environmental rhythms...
Circadian clocks have evolved to synchronise an organism's physiology with the environmental rhythms...
The circadian clock, which governs metabolic and physiological rhythms in diverse organisms, shares ...
movement continues even when a plant is kept in constant darkness (De Mairan 1729). These so-called ...
How do cells perceive time? Do cells use temporal information to regulate the production/degradation...
Circadian rhythms exist in most if not all organisms on the Earth and manifest in various aspects of...
The circadian clock is the internal timekeeper of plants. This clock regulates most aspects of plant...
The circadian clock is the internal timekeeper of plants. This clock regulates most aspects of plant...
AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cyc...
How do cells perceive time? Do cells use temporal information to regulate the production/degradation...
The daily rhythms that adapt organisms to the solar cycle are driven by internal circadian clocks. T...
Cyanobacteria are the only model circadian clock system in which a circadian oscillator can be recon...
Cyanobacteria are the only model circadian clock system in which a circadian oscillator can be recon...
SummaryCyanobacteria have become a major model system for analyzing circadian rhythms. The temporal ...
The remarkably stable circadian oscillations of single cyanobacteria enable a population of growing ...
Circadian clocks have evolved to synchronise an organism's physiology with the environmental rhythms...
Circadian clocks have evolved to synchronise an organism's physiology with the environmental rhythms...
The circadian clock, which governs metabolic and physiological rhythms in diverse organisms, shares ...
movement continues even when a plant is kept in constant darkness (De Mairan 1729). These so-called ...
How do cells perceive time? Do cells use temporal information to regulate the production/degradation...
Circadian rhythms exist in most if not all organisms on the Earth and manifest in various aspects of...
The circadian clock is the internal timekeeper of plants. This clock regulates most aspects of plant...
The circadian clock is the internal timekeeper of plants. This clock regulates most aspects of plant...
AbstractMany organisms display rhythms of physiology and behavior that are entrained to the 24-h cyc...
How do cells perceive time? Do cells use temporal information to regulate the production/degradation...