Similar gene controls plant, human clocks
Washington, Dec 2 (ANI): UC Davis researchers have identified a gene that controls part of the 'tick tock' in a plant's circadian clock. And not only is the plant gene very similar to one in humans, but the human gene can work in plant cells-and vice versa.
"It's surprising to find a clock gene that is performing the same function across such widely unrelated groups," said Stacey Harmer, associate professor of plant biology in the UC Davis College of Biological Sciences and senior author on the paper.
Major groups of living things-plants, animals and fungi-all have circadian clocks that work in similar ways but are built from different pieces, Harmer said. The newly identified gene is an exception to that.
Harmer and UC Davis postdoctoral scholar Matthew Jones, with colleagues at Rice University in Houston and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, identified the "Jumonji-containing domain 5 gene," or JMJD5, from the lab plant Arabidopsis by screening existing databases for genes that were switched on along with the central plant clock gene, TOC1.
JMJD5 stood out. The protein made by the gene can carry out chemical modification of the histone proteins around which DNA is wrapped, and can likely regulate how genes are turned on and off-potentially making it part of a clock oscillator.
When Harmer and colleagues made Arabidopsis plants with a deficient gene, they found that the plants' in-built circadian clock ran fast.
A similar gene is found in humans, and human cells with a deficiency in this gene also have a fast-running clock. When the researchers inserted the plant gene into the defective human cells, they could set the clock back to normal-and the human gene could do the same trick in plant seedlings.
Because the rest of the clock genes are quite different between plants and humans, Harmer thinks that the fact that a very similar gene has the same function in both plants and humans is probably an example of convergent evolution, rather than something handed down from a distant common ancestor.
Convergent evolution is when two organisms arrive at the same solution to a problem but apparently from different starting points.
Maintaining accurate circadian rhythms is hugely important to living things, from maintaining sleep/wake cycles in animals to controlling when plants flower.
The research is published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)
-
Who Is Rajat Dalal’s Wife? Bigg Boss 18 Fame Star Announces Wedding, Shares Dreamy Photos -
Tamil Nadu Elections 2026: TVK Announces Candidate List; Vijay To Contest From Perambur And Trichy East -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 29 March 2026: Gold And Silver Continue Upward Trend After Recent Dip -
Hyderabad Weather Alert: Intense Thunderstorms, Hail And Lightning Likely On March 30-31 -
Bihar Board 10th Result 2026: Where and How to Check BSEB Matric Scorecard -
Pakistan Mediation Advances In US Iran Talks And Regional Diplomacy -
Cancer Horoscope for Today March 29, 2026, Sunday - Cancer Horoscope For Today, March 29, 2026, Sunday - Slow Down, Trust Your Gut, and Take One Thing at a Time -
Iran-Israel war: Houthis join fighting as shipping risks grow in Hormuz and the Red Sea -
DMK Manifesto 2026: MK Stalin Promises ₹2,000 Monthly Aid, 10 Lakh Houses, Higher Pensions, Free Power & More -
TN Polls 2026: Vijay’s TVK Manifesto Promises Jobs, Cash Support, Free Loans; Sidelining Traditional Politics -
Rs 10,00,00,000...: Woman in UP Refuses to Withdraw ₹10 Crore Mistakenly Credited to Her Account -
Virgo Horoscope for Today March 29, 2026, Sunday - Get Organised Stay Calm And Notice Every Detail












Click it and Unblock the Notifications