Abstract

The green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, also called 'green yeast', emerged in the past years as a model organism for specific scientific questions such as chloroplast biogenesis and function, the composition of the flagella including its basal apparatus, or the mechanism of the circadian clock. Sequencing of its chloroplast and mitochondrial genomes have already been completed and a first draft of its nuclear genome has also been released recently. In C. reinhardtii several circadian rhythms are physiologically well characterized, and one of them has even been shown to operate in outer space. Circadian expression patterns of nuclear and plastid genes have been studied. The mode of regulation of these genes occurs at the transcriptional level, although there is also evidence for posttranscriptional control. A clock-controlled, phylogenetically conserved RNA-binding protein was characterized in this alga, which interacts with several mRNAs that all contain a common cis-acting motif. Its function within the circadian system is currently under investigation. This review summarizes the current state of the knowledge about the circadian system in C. reinhardtii and points out its potential for future studies.

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