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Biological Clock Found in Plants

Joe the Lesser writes "This CNN article discusses how scientists have found that a chemical 'clock' that tells a plant to prepare for the sun. The clock controls an enzyme that modifies a protein called D1. This protein is critical for photosynthesis, the process whereby plants extract light and convert it to food. When D1 binds with phosphorus, it creates a modified protein found in chloroplast -- a special structure in the cell that's made of carbohydrates, fat and proteins."

32 comments

  1. I have a clock like that. by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1


    I have something like that, it makes strange growling noises need my belly buttons right around lunch time.

    --
    Neck_of_the_Woods
    #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    1. Re:I have a clock like that. by knowledgepeacewi · · Score: 1

      yes and its called the pineal gland. It reacts to the amount of light recieved in through your eyes. The amount of artificial light a young girl recieves is blamed for sooner puberty rates in young girls.

    2. Re:I have a clock like that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Another possible cause of early onset female puberty is hormone disrupters. As these folks and many others point out:
      Our delicately balanced hormone system regulates much of our bodies. It governs, for example, the way children grow into adults, our sexual characteristics and our day-to-day bodily functions, such as the way our bodies burn oxygen to make energy and the way we digest food. Hormone disrupting chemicals are able to imitate or disrupt the action of these natural hormones. It is increasingly being discovered that more and more chemicals in everyday use are hormone disrupters.
  2. Uses??? by Kiriwas · · Score: 0

    Can this really help us at all with our own bio clocks though? Seems to me that plants are just too different to really help us with that. Then again, maybe I'm looking at it wrong and can be good for other sorts of genetic modification. Then yet again....sometimes research is good just for research. -Kiriwas FP?

    1. Re:Uses??? by spotted_dolphin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There may not be an actual use for this protein for us, but it may give us a better understanding of the mechanism by which it works. A novel mechanism may give us a better understanding of some interactions in our own body, even if the pathways may not be directly related in function.

  3. Old news by L.+VeGas · · Score: 2, Funny

    Of course plants have a biological clock. That's why I switched to boxers.

    ---
    J. Green Giant

    1. Re:Old news by MisterFancypants · · Score: 4, Funny
      Of course plants have a biological clock. That's why I switched to boxers.

      It's almost like that's a joke, except it isn't funny and it doesn't even make any sense.

    2. Re:Old news by js7a · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's almost like that's a joke, except it isn't funny and it doesn't even make any sense.

      I agree, completely. However, for some reason it made me laugh.

      I think my sense of humor is bored and experimenting with surrealism.

    3. Re:Old news by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      ...it doesn't even make any sense.

      Convoluted it is, and all hope of humor is gone if it needs explaining, but for those scratching their heads:

      He signs his post, "J. Green Giant". Jolly Green Giant. Big green guy from frozen vegetable commericials. Could perhaps be a giant humanoid plant.

      Boxers. Men trying to have kids often switch from briefs to boxers (and sometimes take more radical steps) to keep the testicles a little cooler and thus produce more sperm.

      So, the plant-man Jolly Green Giant is conscious that his "biological clock" is ticking. Wants to have kids before it's too late. So he takes measures including changing underwear styles to increase fertility.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're too retarded to get the joke, keep quiet.

    5. Re:Old news by JonTurner · · Score: 1

      >>It's almost like that's a joke, except it isn't funny and it doesn't even make any sense.

      Jeopardy Answer: Who is CarrotTop?

  4. Next thing you know by leviramsey · · Score: 3, Funny

    The lady plants'll start really going on the prowl at about 33 or so...

  5. Odd Article by JAZ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why is it that an article discovery about this 'clock' system in plants seems to be more a description of photosynthesis (which is fairly well understood, if I remember my highschool biology correctly) than the newly discovered clock?

    Maybe they just don't know how the clock works yet, but it would be nice to have more information about the nature of the clock than a explaination of photosynthesis. I know that that photosynthesis is worked in because the clock has an effect on it, but is that really the real story? It isn't IMHO.

    --


    "Karma can only be portioned out by the cosmos." -- Homer Simpson
  6. Life by kamukwam · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if this has anything to do with how old a plant will become. Maybe if they can control its biological clock, they can extend the days of that plant.

    1. Re:Life by spotted_dolphin · · Score: 1

      It's not quite the same type of 'biological clock'; this refers to a daily rhythm rather than a life cycle effect. Animals have an innate sense of light and dark cycles which has been well studied, yet not thoroughly understood. By changing the length of light versus dark exposure (ie. 13 hours light to 11 dark versus 12 hours light to 12 hours dark) one may observe changes in the animal behaviour. Through conditioning, I believe you can entirely flip-flop an animal's day (ie. our morning would be their night and vice versa) when kept in a room with no natural light exposure.
      Anyhow, for a plant this clock is essentially an indicator for when sunlight is available for it to use some energy to make food for storage and when to turn its systems off for the day. If I recall correctly, it also has something to do with IR radiation detection because plants also have to adjust to different day lengths throughout the year.

  7. Hmm needs research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to apply for a research grant to fly to Hawaii with an orchid to see if it gets jet lag. I'm sure the Government of Canada will go for this.

  8. It would be nice if... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...they could find a way to get this to apply to humans. Like a nightly pill. If it's naturally made by plants, it could be cheaper than sythetic and it could make the alarm clock obsolete.

    --
    Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
    1. Re:It would be nice if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one of the stupidest ideas I've ever heard.

    2. Re:It would be nice if... by dacarr · · Score: 1

      Not really, because the use of said pill could beget a dependency on it. Great for chemical manufacturers, but what if you can't get your fix?

      --
      This sig no verb.
  9. Phototropism? by brianjcain · · Score: 1

    We learned about auxins and tropisms in Biology class. Isn't this just one of those?

  10. link to paper + abstract by mlush · · Score: 3, Informative

    link2paper

    Phosphorylation of the D1 Photosystem II Reaction Center Protein Is Controlled by an Endogenous Circadian Rhythm

    Isabelle S. Booij-James, W. Mark Swegle, Marvin Edelman, and Autar K. Mattoo*

    Vegetable Laboratory, The Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center-West, United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2350 (I.S.B.-J., M.S., A.K.M.); and Department of Plant Sciences, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel (M.E.)

    The light dependence of D1 phosphorylation is unique to higher plants, being constitutive in cyanobacteria and algae. In a photoautotrophic higher plant, Spirodela oligorrhiza, grown in greenhouse conditions under natural diurnal cycles of solar irradiation, the ratio of phosphorylated versus total D1 protein (D1-P index: [D1-P]/[D1] + [D1-P]) of photosystem II is shown to undergo reproducible diurnal oscillation. These oscillations were clearly out of phase with the period of maximum in light intensity. The timing of the D1-P index maximum was not affected by changes in temperature, the amount of D1 kinase activity present in the thylakoid membranes, the rate of D1 protein synthesis, or photoinhibition. However, when the dark period in a normal diurnal cycle was cut short artificially by transferring plants to continuous light conditions, the D1-P index timing shifted and reached a maximum within 4 to 5 h of light illumination. The resultant diurnal oscillation persisted for at least two cycles in continuous light, suggesting that the rhythm is endogenous (circadian) and is entrained by an external signal.

    1. Re:link to paper + abstract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum, I smell the blood of a karma whore!

    2. Re:link to paper + abstract by mlush · · Score: 1
      Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum, I smell the blood of a karma whore!

      Is it just me or does the concept of karma whore rahter miss the point of karma?

  11. Biological Clock Found In Pants. by WayneGayle · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...is how I read this headline.

    --

    "America, I smoke marijuana every chance I get."
  12. That's why by Jru+Hym · · Score: 2, Funny

    a certain plant gets very nervous at 4:20

    --
    This lobster was alive when it hit the frothy, boiling water.
  13. hmm... by C21 · · Score: 1

    One possible use maybe is for indoor growing. Knowing this "clock" we can better regulate the on/off cycles to maximize efficiency of artificial life, sprinklers, and topical fertilizer.

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    this is not a sig.
  14. remove one more l by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    really

  15. Plant ageing clock by tlambert · · Score: 3, Informative

    The plant ageing clock is the same as the human ageing clock; it's based on something called "the Hayflick limit", which is the limit on the number of times a cell can divide.

    You can look it up on the web, but the short version is that each time a cell divides, it shortens the telomeres on the ends of its genes; when it runs out of telomeres, the cell dies (or becomes cancerous, or is subject to other age-related disease processes).

    Baby humans and plants don't have this limit, since, in gametogenesis, the telomeres are lengthened by a chemical called "telomerase", effectively resetting the clock for the newly created entity.

    -- Terry

    1. Re:Plant ageing clock by thgreatoz · · Score: 0

      ...that's great, but that's not what the article was talking about. It was referring to a chemical that told the plant to prepare for lots of sunlight, not that it had been alive for too long and should shrivel up and die.

      --
      When their numbers dwindled from 50 to 8, the dwarves began to suspect Hungry.
  16. this doesn't surprise me... by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

    because if you think about it, plants do all sorts of things at certain times of the day and season. trees lose their leaves in autumn, i'm sure there's more to that than just the weather changing, because i know that even if the weather changes early, trees don't lose their leaves earlier, they just don't get the pretty foliage that people like to see. also, during the course of the day, certain flowers will open and close depending on sunlight. i've seen flowers open when it's not particularly sunny. this also has to do with something on time. and of course, we all know that plants "move" to the sun. they grow in the direction of the most light. i'd be willing to bet this biological clock isn't necessarily "set" right away as it is in animals, but it probably has to do with the environment the plant is in.

    --
    please me, have no regrets.
  17. Men don't (quite) have ticking clocks by SuperBanana · · Score: 1
    So, the plant-man Jolly Green Giant is conscious that his "biological clock" is ticking

    Though supposedly scientists now think men have biological clocks too...it's women who are 'famous' for have 'ticking' gotta-have-kids clocks. In both sexes, it's designed to get you to reproduce while you're healthy, but women face a rather finite deadline...with guys, it's not quite as....uh...firm...

    Of course, you all seem to have forgotten that the Jolly Green Giant HAS a kid already- 'Sprout'. further proof you can find anything on Google :-).

    What a good role model, though- I've never seen a Mrs. Giant around. Maybe the food companies are trying to brainwash the american public into a lack of family values! Quick, someone tell the religious right to boycott vegetables! :-)