4.8 Article

COP1 and ELF3 Control Circadian Function and Photoperiodic Flowering by Regulating GI Stability

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 32, Issue 5, Pages 617-630

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2008.09.026

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM-47850]
  2. Crop Functional Genomics Center [CG3131]
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST)
  4. Agricultural Plant Stress Research Center [R11-2001-092-05003-0]
  5. Chinese Natural Science Foundation
  6. Human Frontiers Science Program
  7. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN)
  8. Comunidad de Madrid [S-GEN/0191/2006]
  9. [CNSF30325030/30530400]

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Seasonal changes in day length are perceived by plant photoreceptors and transmitted to the circadian clock to modulate developmental responses such as flowering time. Blue-light-sensing cryptochromes, the E3 ubiquitin-ligase COP1, and clock-associated proteins ELF3 and GI regulate this process, although the regulatory link between them is unclear. Here we present data showing that COP1 acts with ELF3 to mediate day length signaling from CRY2 to GI within the photoperiod flowering pathway. We found that COP1 and ELF3 interact in vivo and show that ELF3 allows COP1 to interact with GI in vivo, leading to GI degradation in planta. Accordingly, mutation of COP1 or ELF3 disturbs the pattern of GI cyclic accumulation. We propose a model in which ELF3 acts as a substrate adaptor, enabling COP1 to modulate light input signal to the circadian clock through targeted destabilization of GI.

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