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Dive into the research topics where Paul F. Devlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul F. Devlin.


Nature | 2000

Functional interaction of phytochrome B and cryptochrome 2.

Paloma Más; Paul F. Devlin; Satchidananda Panda; Steve A. Kay

Light is a crucial environmental signal that controls many photomorphogenic and circadian responses in plants. Perception and transduction of light is achieved by at least two principal groups of photoreceptors, phytochromes and cryptochromes. Phytochromes are red/far-red light-absorbing receptors encoded by a gene family of five members (phyA to phyE) in Arabidopsis. Cryptochrome 1 (cry1), cryptochrome 2 (cry2) and phototropin are the blue/ultraviolet-A light receptors that have been characterized in Arabidopsis5. Previous studies showed that modulation of many physiological responses in plants is achieved by genetic interactions between different photoreceptors; however, little is known about the nature of these interactions and their roles in the signal transduction pathway. Here we show the genetic interaction that occurs between the Arabidopsis photoreceptors phyB and cry2 in the control of flowering time, hypocotyl elongation and circadian period by the clock. PhyB interacts directly with cry2 as observed in co-immunoprecipitation experiments with transgenic Arabidopsis plants overexpressing cry2. Using fluorescent resonance energy transfer microscopy, we show that phyB and cry2 interact in nuclear speckles that are formed in a light-dependent fashion.


The Plant Cell | 1998

Phytochrome E Influences Internode Elongation and Flowering Time in Arabidopsis

Paul F. Devlin; Samita R. Patel; Garry C. Whitelam

From a screen of M2 seedlings derived from γ-mutagenesis of seeds doubly null for phytochromes phyA and phyB, we isolated a mutant lacking phyE. The PHYE gene of the selected mutant, phyE-1, was found to contain a 1-bp deletion at a position equivalent to codon 726, which is predicted to result in a premature stop at codon 739. Immunoblot analysis showed that the phyE protein was undetectable in the phyE-1 mutant. In the phyA- and phyB-deficient background, phyE deficiency led to early flowering, elongation of internodes between adjacent rosette leaves, and reduced petiole elongation. This is a phenocopy of the response of phyA phyB seedlings to end-of-day far-red light treatments. Furthermore, a phyE deficiency attenuated the responses of phyA phyB seedlings to end-of-day far-red light treatments. Monogenic phyE mutants were indistinguishable from wild-type seedlings. However, phyB phyE double mutants flowered earlier and had longer petioles than did phyB mutants. The elongation and flowering responses conferred by phyE deficiency are typical of shade avoidance responses to the low red/far-red ratio. We conclude that in conjunction with phyB and to a lesser extent with phyD, phyE functions in the regulation of the shade avoidance syndrome.


The Plant Cell | 2000

Cryptochromes Are Required for Phytochrome Signaling to the Circadian Clock but Not for Rhythmicity

Paul F. Devlin; Steve A. Kay

The circadian clock is entrained to the daily cycle of day and night by light signals at dawn and dusk. Plants make use of both the phytochrome (phy) and cryptochrome (cry) families of photoreceptors in gathering information about the light environment for setting the clock. We demonstrate that the phytochromes phyA, phyB, phyD, and phyE act as photoreceptors in red light input to the clock and that phyA and the cryptochromes cry1 and cry2 act as photoreceptors in blue light input. phyA and phyB act additively in red light input to the clock, whereas cry1 and cry2 act redundantly in blue light input. In addition to the action of cry1 as a photoreceptor that mediates blue light input into the clock, we demonstrate a requirement of cry1 for phyA signaling to the clock in both red and blue light. Importantly, Arabidopsis cry1 cry2 double mutants still show robust rhythmicity, indicating that cryptochromes do not form a part of the central circadian oscillator in plants as they do in mammals.


Plant Physiology | 2003

A Genomic Analysis of the Shade Avoidance Response in Arabidopsis

Paul F. Devlin; Marcelo J. Yanovsky; Steve A. Kay

Plants respond to the proximity of neighboring vegetation by elongating to prevent shading. Red-depleted light reflected from neighboring vegetation triggers a shade avoidance response leading to a dramatic change in plant architecture. These changes in light quality are detected by the phytochrome family of photoreceptors. We analyzed global changes in gene expression over time in wild-type, phyB mutant, and phyA phyB double mutant seedlings of Arabidopsis in response to simulated shade. Using pattern fitting software, we identified 301 genes as shade responsive with patterns of expression corresponding to one of various physiological response modes. A requirement for a consistent pattern of expression across 12 chips in this way allowed more subtle changes in gene expression to be considered meaningful. A number of previously characterized genes involved in light and hormone signaling were identified as shade responsive, as well as several putative, novel shade-specific signal transduction factors. In addition, changes in expression of genes in a range of pathways associated with elongation growth and stress responses were observed. The majority of shade-responsive genes demonstrated antagonistic regulation by phyA and phyB in response to shade following the pattern of many physiological responses. An analysis of promoter elements of genes regulated in this way identified conserved promoter motifs potentially important in shade regulation.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

Coordinated transcriptional regulation underlying the circadian clock in Arabidopsis

Gang Li; Hamad Siddiqui; Yibo Teng; Rongcheng Lin; Xiangyuan Wan; Jigang Li; On-Sun Lau; Xinhao Ouyang; Mingqiu Dai; Jianmin Wan; Paul F. Devlin; Xing-Wang Deng; Haiyang Wang

The circadian clock controls many metabolic, developmental and physiological processes in a time-of-day-specific manner in both plants and animals. The photoreceptors involved in the perception of light and entrainment of the circadian clock have been well characterized in plants. However, how light signals are transduced from the photoreceptors to the central circadian oscillator, and how the rhythmic expression pattern of a clock gene is generated and maintained by diurnal light signals remain unclear. Here, we show that in Arabidopsis thaliana, FHY3, FAR1 and HY5, three positive regulators of the phytochrome A signalling pathway, directly bind to the promoter of ELF4, a proposed component of the central oscillator, and activate its expression during the day, whereas the circadian-controlled CCA1 and LHY proteins directly suppress ELF4 expression periodically at dawn through physical interactions with these transcription-promoting factors. Our findings provide evidence that a set of light- and circadian-regulated transcription factors act directly and coordinately at the ELF4 promoter to regulate its cyclic expression, and establish a potential molecular link connecting the environmental light–dark cycle to the central oscillator.


FEBS Letters | 2011

Timing in plants – A rhythmic arrangement

Harriet G. McWatters; Paul F. Devlin

The circadian clock regulates many aspects of plant physiology, growth and development. It produces daily rhythms of growth and metabolism, and interacts with signalling pathways controlling environmental responses over the course of a day or a year. Over the last decade, a combination of empirical research in molecular genetics and mathematical modelling, mostly utilising Arabidopsis thaliana, has led to the identification of many plant clock components and an understanding of their interlocking roles within the biochemical mechanism. The plant clock shares many characteristics of circadian clocks in other taxa, being temperature‐compensated, capable of generating endogenous rhythms, of entraining to environmental cycles and regulated by means of transcription–translation feedback loops; however, few, if any, components of the plant clock appear to be shared with other organisms, indicating an independent evolutionary origin. In this review, we describe our current understanding of the central clockwork and how it receives input and regulates outputs. We also discuss the interaction between the clock and the environment, identifying areas, such as the integration of non‐photic stimuli, where future work will lead to a fuller understanding of how the circadian system is embedded in plant physiology.


The Plant Cell | 2006

Arabidopsis FHY3 Specifically Gates Phytochrome Signaling to the Circadian Clock

Trudie Allen; Athanasios Koustenis; George Theodorou; David E. Somers; Steve A. Kay; Garry C. Whitelam; Paul F. Devlin

Circadian gating of light signaling limits the timing of maximum responsiveness to light to specific times of day. The fhy3 (for far-red elongated hypocotyl3) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana is involved in independently gating signaling from a group of photoreceptors to an individual response. fhy3 shows an enhanced response to red light during seedling deetiolation. Analysis of two independent fhy3 alleles links enhanced inhibition of hypocotyl elongation in response to red light with an arrhythmic pattern of hypocotyl elongation. Both alleles also show disrupted rhythmicity of central-clock and clock-output gene expression in constant red light. fhy3 exhibits aberrant phase advances under red light pulses during the subjective day. Release-from-light experiments demonstrate clock disruption in fhy3 during the early part of the subjective day in constant red light, suggesting that FHY3 is important in gating red light signaling for clock resetting. The FHY3 gating function appears crucial in the early part of the day for the maintenance of rhythmicity under these conditions. However, unlike previously described Arabidopsis gating mutants that gate all light signaling, gating of direct red light–induced gene expression in fhy3 is unaffected. FHY3 appears to be a novel gating factor, specifically in gating red light signaling to the clock during daytime.


Plant Physiology | 2006

Conservation, Convergence, and Divergence of Light-Responsive, Circadian-Regulated, and Tissue-Specific Expression Patterns during Evolution of the Arabidopsis GATA Gene Family

Iain W. Manfield; Paul F. Devlin; Chih-Hung Jen; David R. Westhead; Philip M. Gilmartin

In vitro analyses of plant GATA transcription factors have implicated some proteins in light-mediated and circadian-regulated gene expression, and, more recently, the analysis of mutants has uncovered further diverse roles for plant GATA factors. To facilitate function discovery for the 29 GATA genes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), we have experimentally verified gene structures and determined expression patterns of all family members across adult tissues and suspension cell cultures, as well as in response to light and signals from the circadian clock. These analyses have identified two genes that are strongly developmentally light regulated, expressed predominantly in photosynthetic tissue, and with transcript abundance peaking before dawn. In contrast, several GATA factor genes are light down-regulated. The products of these light-regulated genes are candidates for those proteins previously implicated in light-regulated transcription. Coexpression of these genes with well-characterized light-responsive transcripts across a large microarray data set supports these predictions. Other genes show additional tissue-specific expression patterns suggesting novel and unpredicted roles. Genome-wide analysis using coexpression scatter plots for paralogous gene pairs reveals unexpected differences in cocorrelated gene expression profiles. Clustering the Arabidopsis GATA factor gene family by similarity of expression patterns reveals that genes of recent descent do not uniformly show conserved current expression profiles, yet some genes showing more distant evolutionary origins have acquired common expression patterns. In addition to defining developmental and environmental dynamics of GATA transcript abundance, these analyses offer new insights into the evolution of gene expression profiles following gene duplication events.


Trends in Cell Biology | 1999

Cryptochromes – bringing the blues to circadian rhythms

Paul F. Devlin; Steve A. Kay

Cryptochromes are blue/UV-A-absorbing photoreceptor proteins discovered originally in plants and so named because their nature proved elusive in over a century of research. Now we know that the photoreceptor essential for proper seedling establishment in blue light has homologues in the animal kingdom - in insects, in mice and in humans. In recent months, evidence has emerged pointing to a common role for cryptochromes in all of these organisms in entraining the circadian clock, a biochemical timing mechanism running within cells, synchronizing metabolism to the daily light-dark cycle and having consequences on a much larger scale in the regulation of behaviour such as the sleep-wake cycle.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 1998

Light signalling in Arabidopsis

Garry C. Whitelam; Paul F. Devlin

Abstract Of the numerous environmental factors that regulate the growth and development of plants, light is one of the most important. Plants employ a series of discrete photoreceptors, absorbing in different regions of the light spectrum, in order to monitor the presence, direction, intensity, quality and duration of light. The principal signal-transducing photoreceptor families are the red/far-red light-absorbing phytochromes and the blue/UV-A light-absorbing photoreceptors, which include the cryptochromes. The application of genetic techniques, particularly using Arabidopsis , is leading to elucidation of the roles of, and interactions between, the various photoreceptors. Genetic screens have also been used to dissect the signal transduction pathways that are triggered by photoreceptor activation. The selection of mutants which, when grown in the dark, resemble light-grown seedlings, has led to the identification of a series of nuclear-localised negative regulators: the products of the COPI/DET/FUS genes. These repressors appear to act downstream of multiple photoreceptors, as well as being involved in other signalling pathways. Other COP and DET genes are involved in regulating cellular levels of cytokinins and brassinosteroids, and these regulators have also been implicated in light signalling. In addition, several mutants that define positive regulators, which appear to act in pathways specific to individual photoreceptors, have also been identified.

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Steve A. Kay

University of Southern California

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Peter H. Quail

University of California

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