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Rhythmidia: A modern tool for circadian period analysis of filamentous fungi

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  • Alex T Keeley
  • Jeffrey M Lotthammer
  • Jacqueline F Pelham

Abstract

Circadian rhythms are ubiquitous across the kingdoms of life and serve important roles in regulating physiology and behavior at many levels. These rhythms occur in ~24-hour cycles and are driven by a core molecular oscillator. Circadian timekeeping enables organisms to anticipate daily changes by timing their growth and internal processes. Neurospora crassa is a model organism with a long history in circadian biology, having conserved eukaryotic clock properties and observable circadian phenotypes. A core approach for measuring circadian function in Neurospora is to follow daily oscillations in the direction of growth and spore formation along a thin glass tube (race tube). While leveraging robust phenotypic readouts is useful, interpreting the outputs of large-scale race tube experiments by hand can be time-consuming and prone to human error. To provide the field with an efficient tool for analyzing race tubes, we present Rhythmidia, a graphical user interface (GUI) tool written in Python for calculating circadian periods and growth rates of Neurospora. Rhythmidia is open source, has been benchmarked against the current state-of-the-art, and is easily accessible on GitHub.

Suggested Citation

  • Alex T Keeley & Jeffrey M Lotthammer & Jacqueline F Pelham, 2024. "Rhythmidia: A modern tool for circadian period analysis of filamentous fungi," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 20(8), pages 1-16, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1012167
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012167
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    1. James E. Galagan & Sarah E. Calvo & Katherine A. Borkovich & Eric U. Selker & Nick D. Read & David Jaffe & William FitzHugh & Li-Jun Ma & Serge Smirnov & Seth Purcell & Bushra Rehman & Timothy Elkins , 2003. "The genome sequence of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa," Nature, Nature, vol. 422(6934), pages 859-868, April.
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