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Creators/Authors contains: "Saraf, Niharika"

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  1. Abstract Myxobacteria are non-photosynthetic bacteria distinguished among prokaryotes by a multicellular stage in their life cycle known as fruiting bodies that are formed in response to nutrient deprivation and stimulated by light. Here, we report an entrained, rhythmic pattern ofMyxococcus macrosporusfruiting bodies, forming consistently spaced concentric rings when grown in the dark. Light exposure disrupts this rhythmic phenotype, resulting in a sporadic arrangement and reduced fruiting-body count.M. macrosporusgenome encodes a red-light photoreceptor, a bacteriophytochrome (BphP), previously shown to affect the fruiting-body formation in the related myxobacteriumStigmatella aurantiaca. Similarly, the formation ofM. macrosporusfruiting bodies is also impacted by the exposure to BphP—specific wavelengths of light. RNA-Seq analysis ofM. macrosporusrevealed constitutive expression of thebphPgene. Phytochromes, as light-regulated enzymes, control many aspects of plant development including photomorphogenesis. They are intrinsically correlated to circadian clock proteins, impacting the overall light-mediated entrainment of the circadian clock. However, this functional relationship remains unexplored in non-photosynthetic prokaryotes. Genomic analysis unveiled the presence of multiple homologs of cyanobacterial core oscillatory gene,kaiC, in various myxobacteria, includingM. macrosporus,S. aurantiaca and M. xanthus. RNA-Seq analysis verified the expression of allkaiChomologs inM. macrosporusand the closely relatedM. xanthus, which lacksbphPgenes. Overall, this study unravels the rhythmic growth pattern duringM. macrosporusdevelopment, governed by environmental factors such as light and nutrients. In addition, myxobacteria may have a time-measuring mechanism resembling the cyanobacterial circadian clock that links the photoreceptor (BphP) function to the observed rhythmic behavior. Graphical abstract 
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