“…The abundance of their transcripts and proteins exhibit circadian rhythms, and under diurnal conditions, they peak in expression sequentially at 2–3 h intervals during the light period in the order PRR9 , PRR7 , PRR5 , PRR3 , and TOC1 (Matsushika et al , 2000; Fujiwara et al , 2008). PRR9, PRR7, PRR5, and TOC1 proteins are degraded during the night, so they mainly accumulate during the day when they repress transcription of genes encoding other clock components such as LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY) and CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED 1 (CCA1) (Mas et al , 2003b; Farré & Kay, 2007; Ito et al , 2007; Kiba et al , 2007; Nakamichi et al , 2010; Huang et al , 2012). Mutations in the PRR genes also delay flowering under LDs (Nakamichi et al , 2005; Ito et al , 2008), but double or triple mutants exhibit much stronger phenotypes suggesting functional redundancy between the genes (Nakamichi et al , 2005, p. 549; Ito et al , 2008).…”