Abstract The circadian clock helps organisms to anticipate and coordinate gene regulatory responses to changes in environmental stimuli. Under growth limiting temperatures, the time of the day modulates the accumulation of polyadenylated mRNAs. In response to heat stress, plants will conserve energy and selectively translate mRNAs. How the clock and/or the time of the day regulates polyadenylated mRNAs bound by ribosomes in response to heat stress is unknown. In-depth analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana translating mRNAs found that the time of the day gates the response of approximately one-third of the circadian-regulated heat-responsive translatome. Specifically, the time of the day and heat stress interact to prioritize the pool of mRNAs in cue to be translated. For a subset of mRNAs, we observed a stronger gated response during the day, and preferentially before the peak of expression. We propose previously overlooked transcription factors (TFs) as regulatory nodes and show that the clock plays a role in the temperature response for select TFs. When the stress was removed, the redefined priorities for translation recovered within 1 h, though slower recovery was observed for abiotic stress regulators. Through hierarchical network connections between clock genes and prioritized TFs, our work provides a framework to target key nodes underlying heat stress tolerance throughout the day.
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This content will become publicly available on December 1, 2026
Regulatory links between the circadian clock and stress-induced biomolecular condensates
The circadian clock is a conserved timekeeping mechanism that is essential for integrating different environmental cues such as light and temperature to coordinate biological processes with the time of day. While much is known about transcriptional regulation by the clock, the role of post-transcriptional regulation, particularly through sequestration into biomolecular condensate such as stress granules, remains less understood. Stress granules are dynamic RNA-protein assemblies that play a critical role in the cellular response to stress by sequestering mRNAs to regulate translation during stressful conditions. In animals and fungi, the circadian clock regulates stress granule formation and mRNA translation by controlling key factors such as eIF2α, which orchestrates the rhythmic sequestration and translation of specific mRNAs. In plants, it has been shown that some transcripts, despite coming from arrhythmic expression, are rhythmically translated. In addition, some clock-controlled genes (CCGs) are induced in response to heat stress only at the transcriptional level and not at the translational level. Together this highlights a layer of clock regulation beyond transcription. This review discusses the intersection between the circadian clock and heat stress-related biomolecular condensates across eukaryotes, with a particular focus on plants. We discuss how the clock may regulate stress granule dynamics and preferential translation of mRNAs at specific times of the day or during stress responses, thereby enhancing cellular function and energy efficiency. By integrating evidence from animals, fungi, and plants, we highlight emerging questions regarding the role of biomolecular condensates as post-transcriptional mechanisms in controlling circadian rhythms and stress tolerance in plants.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1922642
- PAR ID:
- 10635074
- Publisher / Repository:
- Nature Publishing : npj Biological Timing and Sleep
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- npj Biological Timing and Sleep
- Volume:
- 2
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2948-281X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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