# Rhythmic Mechanisms Governing CAM Photosynthesis in Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi: High-Resolution Temporal Transcriptomics

**Authors:** Rongbin Hu, Sara Jawdy, Avinash Sreedasyam, Anna Lipzen, Mei Wang, Vivian Ng, Christopher Daum, Keykhosrow Keymanesh, Degao Liu, Alex Hu, Asher Pasha, Nicholas J. Provart, Anne M. Borland, Timothy J. Tschaplinski, Gerald A. Tuskan, Jeremy Schmutz, Xiaohan Yang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms27031342 · International Journal of Molecular Sciences · 2026-01-29

## TL;DR

This study explores how Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi regulates its CAM photosynthesis using high-resolution gene activity data over time.

## Contribution

The study identifies new regulatory genes and mechanisms, including epigenetic and organellar control, in CAM photosynthesis.

## Key findings

- Diel light cues drive rhythmic gene expression in most annotated genes under light/dark cycles.
- A small subset of genes maintains rhythmicity in continuous light, indicating circadian clock involvement.
- Key hub genes like HUB2 and PPR proteins are central to CAM regulation, suggesting new control tiers.

## Abstract

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a specialized photosynthetic pathway that enhances water-use efficiency by temporally separating nocturnal CO2 uptake from daytime decarboxylation and carbon fixation. To uncover the regulatory mechanisms coordinating these temporal dynamics, we generated high-resolution, 48 h time-course transcriptomes for the CAM model Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi under both 12 h/12 h light/dark (LD) cycles and continuous light (LL). A rhythmicity analysis revealed that diel light cues are the dominant driver of transcript oscillations: 16,810 genes (54.3% of annotated genes) exhibited rhythmic expression only under LD, whereas just 399 genes (1.3%) remained rhythmic under LL. A smaller set of 3009 genes (9.7%) oscillated in both conditions, indicating that the intrinsic circadian clock sustains rhythmicity for a limited subset of the transcriptome. A gene co-expression network analysis revealed extensive integration between circadian clock components, core CAM pathway enzymes, and stomatal regulators, defining regulatory modules that coordinate metabolic and physiological timing. Notably, key hub genes associated with post-translational and post-transcriptional regulation, including the E3 ubiquitin ligase HUB2 and several pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins, act as central nodes in CAM-associated networks. This discovery implicates epigenetic and organellar regulation as previously unrecognized critical tiers of control in CAM. Together, our results support a regulatory model in which CAM rhythmicity is governed by both external light/dark cues and the endogenous circadian clock through multi-level control spanning transcriptional and protein-level regulation. To support community exploration, we also provide an interactive eFP (electronic Fluorescent Pictograph) browser for visualizing time-resolved gene expression profiles.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** HUB2 (histone mono-ubiquitination 2) [NCBI Gene 841968]
- **Species:** Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi (taxon 63787)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CBLL2 (Cbl proto-oncogene like 2) [NCBI Gene 158506] {aka CT138, HAKAIL, ZNF645}
- **Chemicals:** CO2 (MESH:D002245), carbon (MESH:D002244), Crassulacean acid (-)
- **Species:** Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi (lavender-scallops, species) [taxon 63787]

## Full text

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## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897691/full.md

## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897691/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897691