PRR3, PRR5, PRR7 and PRR9 participate in the repressilator of a negative autoregulatory feedback loop that synchronizes to environmental inputs. The repressilator has a morning, evening, and night loop that are regulated in part by the pseudo-response regulator proteins' interactions with CCA1 and LHY. CCA1 and LHY exhibit peak binding to PRR9, PRR7, and PRR5 in the morning, evening, and night, respectively.
PRR3 and PRR5 When
phosphorylated by an unknown
kinase, PRR5 and PRR3 proteins demonstrate increased binding to TIMING OF CAB2 EXPRESSION 1 (
TOC1). This interaction stabilizes both TOC1 and PRR5 and prevents their degradation by the
F-box protein ZEITLUPE (ZTL). Through this mechanism, PRR5 is indirectly activated by light, as ZTL is inhibited by light. Additionally, PRR5 contributes to the transcriptional repression of the genes encoding the single MYB transcription factors CCA1 and LHY.
PRR7 and PRR9 Two single MYB transcription factors, CCA1 and LHY, activate expression of
PRR7 and
PRR9. In turn, PRR7 and PRR9 repress
CCA1 and
LHY through the binding of their promoters. This interaction forms the morning loop of the
repressilator of the biological clock in
A. thaliana. Chromatin
immunoprecipitation demonstrates that LUX binds to the
PRR9 promoter to repress it. Additionally, ELF3 has been shown to activate
PRR9 and repress
CCA1 and
LHY. PRR9 is also activated by alternative
RNA splicing. When
PRMT5 (a
methylation factor) is prevented from methylating intron 2 of PRR9, a
frameshift resulting in premature truncation occurs. PRR7 and PRR9 also play a role in the
entrainment of
A. thaliana to a temperature cycle. Double-mutant plants with inactivated
PRR7 and
PRR9 exhibit extreme period lengthening at high temperatures but show no change in period at low temperatures. However, the inactivation of
CCA1 and
LHY in the
PRR7/PRR9 loss-of-function mutants shows no change in period at high temperatures—this suggests that
PRR7 and
PRR9 are acting by overcompensation. == Interactions Within Arabidopsis ==