Since the clock genes of
Arabidopsis have been identified, the clock mechanism of
Arabidopsis has been extended to other dicotyledonous plants; soybean [
24], chestnut [
29],
Brassica rapa[
46], poplar [
23] and also to monocotyledonous plants; rice [
25], maize [
22], duckweed [
28]. Here, we identified three core circadian clock genes in a wild tobacco,
N. attenuata. Analyses of the circadian rhythms of transcript accumulation and protein similarity allowed us to identify orthologs of
LHY,
TOC1, and
ZTL of
Arabidopsis in
N. attenuata. Protein interactions of TOC1 and ZTL in
Arabidopsis were also conserved in
N. attenuata. In addition, ectopic expression of
NaLHY and
NaZTL in
Arabidopsis confirmed the functional conservation of LHY and ZTL in
N. attenuata. We also demonstrated that
NaTOC1 in
N. attenuata plays an important role in the regulation of flowering time.
The number of
LHY (or
CCA1) orthologous genes and the timing of gene duplication events differ among plant species [
23]. One common ancestor of LHY/CCA1 independently duplicated in monocots and eudicots.
Populus nigra and
P. trichocarpa contain two
LHY orthologs and the monocots, rice and
Sorghum bicolor contain one
CCA1-like gene in their genome [
23,
47]. Gene duplication events of
LHY/
CCA1 in popular and
Arabidopsis would be expected in
N. attenuata but we were able to find only one
LHY/
CCA1 like gene in
N. attenuata. However, the second ortholog could be missing in our current cDNA library and we plan to perform deep sequencing of the transcriptome and microarray analysis of plants grown under a variety of conditions in the future to clarify the evolutionary relationship of
N. attenuata’s
LHY orthologs.
While components of the endogenous clock and their associated circadian clock mechanisms have clearly been maintained across diverse plant species, clock-mediated signaling has evolved in response to differing selection pressures. A perennial plant, chestnut (
Castanea sativa) has orthologs of
AtLHY and
AtTOC1 in its genome and the pattern of transcript accumulation of
CsLHY and
CsTOC1 is similar to that of
Arabidopsis in LD at 22°C [
29]. However, in winter condition, both
CsLHY and
CsTOC1 transcripts lose their diurnal rhythms and maintain high levels of transcripts, which may be associated with the induction of winter dormancy [
29]. Even within a single species,
A. thaliana, genetic variation in the clock components plays a critical role in adapting ecotypes to their local environment [
48]. Genetic variation in the
PRR genes is associated with local adaptation seen in the differential expression of quantitative trait loci in 150
Arabidopsis ecotypes [
48]. In addition, the degree to which TOC1 regulates flowering time differs among
Arabidopsis ecotypes. A semi-dominant
toc1-1 mutant of the
Arabidopsis C24 ecotype displays late a flowering phenotype in LD, whereas the same
TOC1 mutation in the Landsberg ecotype results in no change in flowering time compared with WT plants under LD [
39]. The
toc1-2 mutant shows also no change in flowering time under LD [
45]. However, silencing
TOC1 in
N. attenuata confers a late-flowering phenotype under LD
, which may be due to the longer life span of
N. attenuata (about 3

months) or different circadian clock functions have evolved under various environmental pressures. In future research, we plan to measure the flowering time of ir
TOC1 lines under SD to examine the light sensitivity of this transgenic line.
We have investigated the ecology of
N. attenuata in its native habitat for more than twenty years. During this period, we have observed interesting diurnal rhythmic traits of
N. attenuata and time-of-day dependent ecological interactions. For example,
N. attenuata interacts with different groups of herbivores which are either day-active (such as grasshoppers, mirids and
Manduca larvae) or night-active (such as noctuid larvae and tree crickets) and produces different chemicals that function as direct defenses against these herbivores or function as indirect defenses and attract of predators of the herbivores [
49]. Recently, we showed that tissue specific diurnal rhythm of metabolites and its related transcripts in
N. attenuata changes in response to herbivore attack of a specialist,
M. sexta larvae [
35]. More than 15% of total metabolites that we measured in leaf and root shows diurnal patterns and some of them have been demonstrated to function as plant defenses against herbivore attack. Goodspeed
et al. [
50] have recently reported that feeding behavior of
Tricoplusia ni is predicted by the circadian clock in its host plant
Arabidopsis and it increases anti-herbivore defense of
Arabidopsis. All of these interactions provide a rich arena in which to explore the molecular mechanism of how the circadian clock regulates plant-insect interactions.