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Dive into the research topics where Christian Heintzen is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Heintzen.


Advances in Genetics | 2007

The Neurospora crassa Circadian Clock

Christian Heintzen; Yi Liu

The filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa is one of a handful of model organisms that has proven tractable for dissecting the molecular basis of a eukaryotic circadian clock. Work on Neurospora and other eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms has revealed that a limited set of clock genes and clock proteins are required for generating robust circadian rhythmicity. This molecular clockwork is tuned to the daily rhythms in the environment via light- and temperature-sensitive pathways that adjust its periodicity and phase. The circadian clockwork in turn transduces temporal information to a large number of clock-controlled genes that ultimately control circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior. In summarizing our current understanding of the molecular basis of the Neurospora circadian system, this chapter aims to elucidate the basic building blocks of model eukaryotic clocks as we understand them today.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

VIVID interacts with the WHITE COLLAR complex and FREQUENCY-interacting RNA helicase to alter light and clock responses in Neurospora

Suzanne M. Hunt; Seona Thompson; Mark Elvin; Christian Heintzen

The photoreceptor and PAS/LOV protein VIVID (VVD) modulates blue-light signaling and influences light and temperature responses of the circadian clock in Neurospora crassa. One of the main actions of VVD on the circadian clock is to influence circadian clock phase by regulating levels of the transcripts encoded by the central clock gene frequency (frq). How this regulation is achieved is unknown. Here we show that VVD interacts with complexes central for circadian clock and blue-light signaling, namely the WHITE-COLLAR complex (WCC) and FREQUENCY-interacting RNA helicase (FRH), a component that complexes with FRQ to mediate negative feedback control in Neurospora. VVD interacts with FRH in the absence of WCC and FRQ but does not seem to control the exosome-mediated negative feedback loop. Instead, VVD acts to modulate the transcriptional activity of the WCC.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Natural antisense transcripts and long non-coding RNA in Neurospora crassa.

Yamini Arthanari; Christian Heintzen; Sam Griffiths-Jones; Susan K. Crosthwaite

The prevalence of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) and natural antisense transcripts (NATs) has been reported in a variety of organisms. While a consensus has yet to be reached on their global importance, an increasing number of examples have been shown to be functional, regulating gene expression at the transcriptional and post-transcriptional level. Here, we use RNA sequencing data from the ABI SOLiD platform to identify lncRNA and NATs obtained from samples of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa grown under different light and temperature conditions. We identify 939 novel lncRNAs, of which 477 are antisense to annotated genes. Across the whole dataset, the extent of overlap between sense and antisense transcripts is large: 371 sense/antisense transcripts are complementary over 500 nts or more and 236 overlap by more than 1000 nts. Most prevalent are 3′ end overlaps between convergently transcribed sense/antisense pairs, but examples of divergently transcribed pairs and nested transcripts are also present. We confirm the expression of a subset of sense/antisense transcript pairs by qPCR. We examine the size, types of overlap and expression levels under the different environmental stimuli of light and temperature, and identify 11 lncRNAs that are up-regulated in response to light. We also find differences in transcript length and the position of introns between protein-coding transcripts that have antisense expression and transcripts with no antisense expression. These results demonstrate the ability of N. crassa lncRNAs and NATs to be regulated by different environmental stimuli and provide the scope for further investigation into the function of NATs.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2012

Comprehensive modelling of the Neurospora circadian clock and its temperature compensation

Yu Yao Tseng; Suzanne M. Hunt; Christian Heintzen; Susan K. Crosthwaite; Jean-Marc Schwartz

Circadian clocks provide an internal measure of external time allowing organisms to anticipate and exploit predictable daily changes in the environment. Rhythms driven by circadian clocks have a temperature compensated periodicity of approximately 24 hours that persists in constant conditions and can be reset by environmental time cues. Computational modelling has aided our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of circadian clocks, nevertheless it remains a major challenge to integrate the large number of clock components and their interactions into a single, comprehensive model that is able to account for the full breadth of clock phenotypes. Here we present a comprehensive dynamic model of the Neurospora crassa circadian clock that incorporates its key components and their transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation. The model accounts for a wide range of clock characteristics including: a periodicity of 21.6 hours, persistent oscillation in constant conditions, arrhythmicity in constant light, resetting by brief light pulses, and entrainment to full photoperiods. Crucial components influencing the period and amplitude of oscillations were identified by control analysis. Furthermore, simulations enabled us to propose a mechanism for temperature compensation, which is achieved by simultaneously increasing the translation of frq RNA and decreasing the nuclear import of FRQ protein.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2005

Synchronizing the Neurospora crassa circadian clock with the rhythmic environment

N. Price-Lloyd; M. Elvin; Christian Heintzen

The metronomic predictability of the environment has elicited strong selection pressures for the evolution of endogenous circadian clocks. Circadian clocks drive molecular and behavioural rhythms that approximate the 24 h periodicity of our environment. Found almost ubiquitously among phyla, circadian clocks allow preadaptation to rhythms concomitant with the natural cycles of the Earth. Cycles in light intensity and temperature for example act as important cues that couple circadian clocks to the environment via a process called entrainment. This review summarizes our current understanding of the general and molecular principles of entrainment in the model organism Neurospora crassa, a simple eukaryote that has one of the best-studied circadian systems and light-signalling pathways.


Genetics | 2012

Temperature-Sensitive and Circadian Oscillators of Neurospora crassa Share Components

Suzanne M. Hunt; Mark Elvin; Christian Heintzen

In Neurospora crassa, the interactions between products of the frequency (frq), frequency-interacting RNA helicase (frh), white collar-1 (wc-1), and white collar-2 (wc-2) genes establish a molecular circadian clockwork, called the FRQ-WC-Oscillator (FWO), which is required for the generation of molecular and overt circadian rhythmicity. In strains carrying nonfunctional frq alleles, circadian rhythms in asexual spore development (conidiation) are abolished in constant conditions, yet conidiation remains rhythmic in temperature cycles. Certain characteristics of these temperature-synchronized rhythms have been attributed to the activity of a FRQ-less oscillator (FLO). The molecular components of this FLO are as yet unknown. To test whether the FLO depends on other circadian clock components, we created a strain that carries deletions in the frq, wc-1, wc-2, and vivid (vvd) genes. Conidiation in this ΔFWO strain was still synchronized to cyclic temperature programs, but temperature-induced rhythmicity was distinct from that seen in single frq knockout strains. These results and other evidence presented indicate that components of the FWO are part of the temperature-induced FLO.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

AtGRP7, a nuclear RNA-binding protein as a component of a circadian-regulated negative feedback loop in Arabidopsis thaliana

Christian Heintzen; Mena Nater; Klaus Apel; Dorothee Staiger


Genes & Development | 2005

The PAS/LOV protein VIVID supports a rapidly dampened daytime oscillator that facilitates entrainment of the Neurospora circadian clock

Mark Elvin; Jennifer J. Loros; Jay C. Dunlap; Christian Heintzen


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Assignment of an essential role for the Neurospora frequency gene in circadian entrainment to temperature cycles.

António M. Pregueiro; Nathan Price-Lloyd; Deborah Bell-Pedersen; Christian Heintzen; Jennifer J. Loros; Jay C. Dunlap


Genes & Development | 2007

The PAS/LOV protein VIVID controls temperature compensation of circadian clock phase and development in Neurospora crassa

Suzanne M. Hunt; Mark Elvin; Susan K. Crosthwaite; Christian Heintzen

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M. Elvin

University of Manchester

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N. Price-Lloyd

University of Manchester

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Yu Yao Tseng

University of Manchester

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