The biology of time: dynamic responses of cell types to developmental, circadian and environmental cues

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Abstract

As sessile organisms, plants are finely tuned to respond dynamically to developmental, circadian and environmental cues. Genome-wide studies investigating these types of cues have uncovered the intrinsically different ways they can impact gene expression over time. Recent advances in single-cell sequencing and time-based bioinformatic algorithms are now beginning to reveal the dynamics of these time-based responses within individual cells and plant tissues. Here, we review what these techniques have revealed about the spatiotemporal nature of gene regulation, paying particular attention to the three distinct ways in which plant tissues are time sensitive. (i) First, we discuss how studying plant cell identity can reveal developmental trajectories hidden in pseudotime. (ii) Next, we present evidence that indicates that plant cell types keep their own local time through tissue-specific regulation of the circadian clock. (iii) Finally, we review what determines the speed of environmental signaling responses, and how they can be contingent on developmental and circadian time. By these means, this review sheds light on how these different scales of time-based responses can act with tissue and cell-type specificity to elicit changes in whole plant systems.

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APA

Swift, J., Greenham, K., Ecker, J. R., Coruzzi, G. M., & Robertson McClung, C. (2022, February 1). The biology of time: dynamic responses of cell types to developmental, circadian and environmental cues. Plant Journal. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.15589

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