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1.
The circadian system of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) includes feedback loops of gene regulation that generate 24-h oscillations. Components of these loops remain to be identified; none of the known components is completely understood, including ZEITLUPE (ZTL), a gene implicated in regulated protein degradation. ztl mutations affect both circadian and developmental responses to red light, possibly through ZTL interaction with PHYTOCHROME B (PHYB). We conducted a large-scale genetic screen that identified additional clock-affecting loci. Other mutants recovered include 11 new ztl alleles encompassing mutations in each of the ZTL protein domains. Each mutation lengthened the circadian period, even in dark-grown seedlings entrained to temperature cycles. A mutation of the LIGHT, OXYGEN, VOLTAGE (LOV)/Period-ARNT-Sim (PAS) domain was unique in retaining wild-type responses to red light both for the circadian period and for control of hypocotyl elongation. This uncoupling of ztl phenotypes indicates that interactions of ZTL protein with multiple factors must be disrupted to generate the full ztl mutant phenotype. Protein interaction assays showed that the ztl mutant phenotypes were not fully explained by impaired interactions with previously described partner proteins Arabidopsis S-phase kinase-related protein 1, TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION 1, and PHYB. Interaction with PHYB was unaffected by mutation of any ZTL domain. Mutation of the kelch repeat domain affected protein binding at both the LOV/PAS and the F-box domains, indicating that interaction among ZTL domains leads to the strong phenotypes of kelch mutations. Forward genetics continues to provide insight regarding both known and newly discovered components of the circadian system, although current approaches have saturated mutations at some loci.  相似文献   

2.
Plants constantly survey the surrounding environment using several sets of photoreceptors. They can sense changes in the quantity (=intensity) and quality (=wavelength) of light and use this information to adjust their physiological responses, growth, and developmental patterns. In addition to the classical photoreceptors, such as phytochromes, cryptochromes, and phototropins, ZEITLUPE (ZTL), FLAVIN-BINDING, KELCH REPEAT, F-BOX 1 (FKF1), and LOV KELCH PROTEIN 2 (LKP2) proteins have been recently identified as blue-light photoreceptors that are important for regulation of the circadian clock and photoperiodic flowering. The ZTL/FKF1/LKP2 protein family possesses a unique combination of domains: a blue-light-absorbing LOV (Light, Oxygen, or Voltage) domain along with domains involved in protein degradation. Here, we summarize recent advances in our understanding of the function of the Arabidopsis ZTL/FKF1/LKP2 proteins. We summarize the distinct photochemical properties of their LOV domains and discuss the molecular mechanisms by which the ZTL/FKF1/LKP2 proteins regulate the circadian clock and photoperiodic flowering by controlling blue-light-dependent protein degradation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Algae, plants, bacteria and fungi contain Light-Oxygen-Voltage (LOV) domains that function as blue light sensors to control cellular responses to light. All LOV domains contain a bound flavin chromophore that is reduced upon photon absorption and forms a reversible, metastable covalent bond with a nearby cysteine residue. In Avena sativa LOV2 (AsLOV2), the photocycle is accompanied by an allosteric conformational change that activates the attached phototropin kinase in the full-length protein. Both the conformational change and formation of the cysteinyl-flavin adduct are stabilized by the reduction of the N5 atom in the flavin’s isoalloxazine ring. In this study, we perform a mutational analysis to investigate the requirements for LOV2 to photocycle. We mutated all the residues that interact with the chromophore isoalloxazine ring to inert functional groups but none could fully inhibit the photocycle except those to the active-site cysteine. However, electronegative side chains in the vicinity of the chromophore accelerate the N5 deprotonation and the return to the dark state. Mutations to the N414 and Q513 residues identify a potential water gate and H2O coordination sites. These residues affect the electronic nature of the chromophore and photocycle time by helping catalyze the N5 reduction leading to the completion of the photocycle. In addition, we demonstrate that dehydration leads to drastically slower photocycle times. Finally, to investigate the requirements of an active-site cysteine for photocycling, we moved the nearby cysteine to alternative locations and found that some variants can still photocycle. We propose a new model of the LOV domain photocycle that involves all of these components.  相似文献   

5.
植物通过各类受体来感知外界环境的改变从而调节自身的生长和发育情况。在拟南芥中,植物主要通过隐花色素(Cryptochromes)和向光素(Phototropins)感知蓝光。同时ZEITLUPE (ZTL),FLAVIN-BINDING KELCH REPEAT F-box1 (FKF1)和LOV KELCH PROTEIN2 (LKP2)蛋白家族也作为蓝光受体参与调控植物生长发育过程。因其特殊的蛋白结构组成,在植物的光周期开花、节律性和光形态建成等方面发挥了重要的调控作用。近来,ZTL/FKF1/LKP2蛋白家族被发现参与植物逆境胁迫响应。本文归纳了ZTL/FKF1/LKP2的生物学功能研究进展,并对其作用机制进行了总结与讨论。  相似文献   

6.
Higher plants use several classes of blue light receptors to modulate a wide variety of physiological responses. Among them, both the phototropins and members of the Zeitlupe (ZTL) family use light oxygen voltage (LOV) photosensory domains. In Arabidopsis, these families comprise phot1, phot2 and ZTL, LOV Kelch Protein 2 (LKP2), and Flavin-binding Kelch F-box1 (FKF1). It has now been convincingly shown that blue-light-induced autophosphorylation of the phot1 kinase domain is an essential step in signal transduction. Recent experiments also shed light on the partially distinct photosensory specificities of phot1 and phot2. Phototropin signaling branches rapidly following photoreceptor activation to mediate distinct responses such as chloroplast movements or phototropism. Light activation of the LOV domain in ZTL family members modulates their capacity to interact with GIGANTEA (GI) and their ubiquitin E3 ligase activity. A complex between GI and FKF1 is required to trigger the degradation of a repressor of CO (CONSTANS) expression and thus modulates flowering time. In contrast, light-regulated complex formation between ZTL and GI appears to limit the capacity of ZTL to degrade its targets, which are part of the circadian oscillator.  相似文献   

7.
The ZEITLUPE (ZTL) protein is involved in the control of circadian period, hypocotyl elongation and flowering time in Arabidopsis thaliana. The aim of the present work was the identification of the InZTL gene and localization of its mRNA in the model short-day plant Ipomoea nil. The deduced InZTL protein of 622 amino acid residues contained a LOV domain at the N-terminal part, followed by an F-box domain and six carboxy terminal kelch repeats. Amino acid sequence of InZTL showed 84 % homology with Mesembryanthemum crystallinum ZTL (McZTL) and 83 % with Arabidopsis thaliana ZTL (AtZTL). Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to InZTL mRNA showed its high accumulation in the vascular bundles as well in the guard cells of the cotyledon. Immunolocalization of ZTL protein indicated a similar distribution pattern of ZTL protein as InZTL mRNAs.  相似文献   

8.
Elongation of hypocotyl cells has been studied as a model for elucidating the contribution of cellular expansion to plant organ growth. ZEITLUPE (ZTL) or LOV KELCH PROTEIN1 (LKP1) is a positive regulator of warmth-induced hypocotyl elongation under white light in Arabidopsis, although the molecular mechanisms by which it promotes hypocotyl cell elongation remain unknown. Microarray analysis showed that 134 genes were upregulated and 204 genes including 15 auxin-inducible genes were downregulated in the seedlings of 2 ztl T-DNA insertion mutants grown under warm conditions with continuous white light. Application of a polar auxin transport inhibitor, an auxin antagonist or an auxin biosynthesis inhibitor inhibited hypocotyl elongation of control seedlings to the level observed with the ztl mutant. Our data suggest the involvement of auxin and auxin-inducible genes in ZTL-mediated hypocotyl elongation.  相似文献   

9.
Three different families of blue-light receptors have been characterized from higher plants: three cryptochromes, two phototropins, and the three members of the ZTL/ADO family. Phototropins and the ZTL/ADO proteins have chromophore modules, designated LOV domains, that bind flavin mononucleotide and undergo formation of a C(4a) flavin-cysteinyl adduct. All contain the highly conserved amino acid motif GXNCRFLQ. Over 90 prokaryote proteins also contain LOV domains with this motif upstream from one of several different functional groups. All of these that have been investigated to date act as photoreceptors in vitro and form the adduct upon irradiation. Four members of the class LOV-histidine kinase, one from a plant pathogen (Pseudomonas syringae), one from an animal pathogen Brucella melitensis), and two from a marine bacterium (Erythrobacter litoralis) respectively, mediate light-activated histidine phosphorylation. Decay of the adduct in darkness after a blue light pulse coincides with loss of the capacity for phosphorylation upon addition of ATP. At present, the biological role(s) of these light-sensitive proteins is under investigation.  相似文献   

10.
Phototropin (phot) is a light-regulated protein kinase that mediates a variety of photoresponses in plants, such as phototropism, chloroplast positioning, and stomata opening. Arabidopsis has two homologues, phot1 and phot2, that share physiological functions depending on light intensity. A phot molecule has two photoreceptive light oxygen voltage-sensing domains, LOV1 and LOV2, and a Ser/Thr kinase domain. The LOV domains undergo a photocycle upon blue light (BL) stimulation, including transient adduct formation between the chromophore and a conserved cysteine (S390 intermediate) that leads to activation of the kinase. To uncover the mechanism underlying the photoactivation of the kinase, we have introduced a kinase assay system composed of a phot1 LOV2-linker-kinase polypeptide as a light-regulated kinase and its N-terminal polypeptide as an artificial substrate (Okajima, K., Matsuoka, D., and Tokutomi, S. (2011) LOV2-linker-kinase phosphorylates LOV1-containing N-terminal polypeptide substrate via photoreaction of LOV2 in Arabidopsis phototropin1. FEBS Lett. 585, 3391–3395). In the present study, we extended the assay system to phot2 and compared the photochemistry and kinase activation by BL between phot1 and phot2 to gain insight into the molecular basis for the different photosensitivities of phot1 and phot2. Photosensitivity of kinase activation by BL and the lifetime of S390 of phot1 were 10 times higher and longer, respectively, than those of phot2. This correlation was confirmed by an amino acid substitution experiment with phot1 to shorten the lifetime of S390. The present results demonstrated that the photosensitivity of kinase activation in phot involves the lifetime of S390 in LOV2, suggesting that the lifetime is one of the key factors for the different photosensitivities observed for phot1 and phot2.  相似文献   

11.
Photoreceptors play an important role in plants and bacteria by converting extracellular stimuli into intracellular signals. One distinct class are the blue-light-sensitive phototropins harboring a light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domain coupled to various effector domains. Photon absorption by the chromophore within the LOV domain results in an activation of the output domain via mechanisms that are hitherto not well understood. The photoreceptor YtvA from Bacillus subtilis is a bacterial analog of phototropins, consists of an LOV and a sulfate transporter/anti-sigma factor antagonist domain, and is involved in the response of the bacterium to environmental stress. We present here analytical ultracentrifugation studies and small-angle X-ray scattering experiments, showing that YtvA is a dimer. On the basis of these results, we present a low-resolution model of the dimer in the dark and the lit state of the protein. In addition, we show that YtvA does not change its oligomerization state or its overall shape upon light activation.  相似文献   

12.
Phototropin (phot) is a blue-light receptor protein that triggers phototropic responses, chloroplast relocation, and stomata opening to maximize the efficiency of photosynthesis in higher plants. Phot is composed of three functional domains. The N-terminal half folds into two light-oxygen-voltage-sensing domains called LOV1 and LOV2, each binding a flavin mononucleotide to absorb blue light. The C-terminal half is a serine/threonine kinase domain that causes light-dependent autophosphorylation leading to cellular signaling cascades. LOV2 domain is primarily responsible for activation of the kinase, and LOV1 domain is thought to act as a dimerization site and to regulate sensitivity to activation by blue light. Here we show the crystal structures of LOV1 domains of Arabidopsis phot1 and phot2 in the dark at resolutions of 2.1 Å and 2.0 Å, respectively. Either LOV1 domain forms a dimer through face-to-face association of β-scaffolds in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. Three types of interactions stabilizing the dimer structures found are as follows: contacts of side chains in their β-scaffolds, hydrophobic interactions of a short helix found in the N-terminus of a subunit with the β-scaffolds of both subunits, and hydrogen bonds mediated by hydration water molecules filling the dimer interface. The critical residues for dimerization are Cys261, forming a disulfide bridge between subunits in phot1-LOV1 domain, and Thr217 and Met232 in phot2-LOV1. The topology in homodimeric associations of the LOV1 domains is discussed when referring to those of homodimers or heterodimers of light-oxygen-voltage-sensing or Per-ARNT-Sim domains. The present results also provide clues to understanding structural basis in dimeric interactions of Per-ARNT-Sim protein modules in cellular signaling.  相似文献   

13.
BackgroundLight, oxygen and voltage (LOV) proteins detect blue light by formation of a covalent ‘photoadduct’ between the flavin chromophore and the neighboring conserved cysteine residue. LOV proteins devoid of this conserved photoactive cysteine are unable to form this ‘photoadduct’ upon light illumination, but they can still elicit functional response via the formation of neutral flavin radical. Recently, tryptophan residue has been shown to be the primary electron donors to the flavin excited state.MethodsPhotoactive cysteine (Cys42) and tryptophan (Trp68) residues in the LOV1 domain of phototropin1 of Ostreococcus tauri (OtLOV1) was mutated to alanine and threonine respectively. Effect of these mutations have been studied using molecular dynamics simulation and spectroscopic techniques.ResultsMolecular dynamics simulation indicated that W68T did not affect the structure of OtLOV1 protein, but C42A leads to some structural changes. An increase in the fluorescence lifetime and quantum yield values was observed for the Trp68 mutant.ConclusionsAn increase in the fluorescence lifetime and quantum yield of Trp68 mutant compared to the wild type protein suggests that Trp68 residue participates in quenching of the flavin excited state followed by photoexcitation.General significanceEnhanced photo-physical properties of Trp68 OtLOV1 mutant might enable its use for the optogenetic and microscopic applications.  相似文献   

14.
Plants and fungi respond to environmental light stimuli via the action of different photoreceptor modules. One such class, responding to the blue region of light, is constituted by photoreceptors containing so-called light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domains as sensor modules. Four major LOV families are currently identified in eukaryotes: (i) the plant phototropins, regulating various physiological effects such as phototropism, chloroplast relocation, and stomatal opening; (ii) the aureochromes, mediating photomorphogenesis in photosynthetic stramenopile algae; (iii) the plant circadian photoreceptors of the zeitlupe (ZTL)/adagio (ADO)/flavin-binding Kelch repeat F-box protein 1 (FKF1) family; and (iv) the fungal circadian photoreceptors white-collar 1 (WC-1). Blue-light-sensitive LOV signaling modules are also widespread throughout the prokaryotic world, and physiological responses mediated by bacterial LOV photoreceptors were recently reported. Thus, the question arises as to the evolutionary relationship between the pro- and eukaryotic LOV photoreceptor systems. We used Bayesian and maximum-likelihood tree reconstruction methods to infer evolutionary scenarios that might have led to the widespread appearance of LOV domains among the pro- and eukaryotes. The phylogenetic study presented here suggests a bacterial origin for the LOV domains of the four major eukaryotic LOV photoreceptor families, whereas the LOV sensor domains were most likely recruited from the bacteria in the course of plastid and mitochondrial endosymbiosis.A plant family of photoreceptors, the phototropins, containing so-called light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domains as the blue-light-sensitive signaling switches (12), were previously identified as the key modulators of a variety of plant blue-light responses, including plant phototropism (23), chloroplast relocation, and stomatal and leaf opening (25, 39). A second family (ZTL/ADO/FKF1 family) of eukaryotic LOV domain-containing proteins is constituted by the zeitlupe (ZTL) and the flavin-binding Kelch repeat F-box (FKF1) proteins. This family was found to play a primary role in the photocontrol of flowering and in the light-dependent regulation of the circadian period in plants (37, 53). Phototropins and ZTLs together with the fungal white-collar 1 (WC-1) proteins of, e.g., Neurospora crassa (3), which are involved in the blue-light dependent control of fungal circadian responses (19), constitute the three major eukaryotic LOV families in plants and fungi. A more recently discovered fourth family of LOV domain-containing blue-light receptors, the so-called aureochromes (58), seem to be restricted to stramenopile algae such as Vaucheria frigida and some marine diatoms (e.g., Thalassiosira pseudonana). Recently, the presence of LOV domain signaling modules was also predicted for animals, including humans. This functional assignment was solely based on sequence similarity to known LOV systems in plants and bacteria (62); however, experimental evidence is still missing. LOV domains are small (110 amino acids), bind flavin mononucleotide as chromophores, and fold independently to adopt a Per-Arndt-Sim (PAS) fold (40), which they share with other ligand-binding sensor modules (59). The best-characterized LOV domains are LOV1 and LOV2, found in plant phototropins (11), which probably regulate the physiological response via a blue-light-dependent phosphorylation of a serine/threonine kinase located C terminal to the LOV sensor domains in plant phototropins. (10). The light-sensitive function of the LOV proteins is based on the presence of a strictly conserved cysteine residue located at a distance of about 4 Å from the isoalloxazine ring of the flavin chromophore. In all LOV domains, this cysteine residue is found as the fourth residue in a highly conserved sequence motif GXNCRFLQG defined previously based on plant phototropin sequences (45). Irradiation with blue light results in the formation of a covalent bond between this cysteine and the carbon atom in position 4a of the flavin isoalloxazine ring. In the dark, this bond reopens within minutes to hours, depending on the respective LOV protein (32). The increasing number of completely sequenced microbial genomes revealed the presence of a variety of putative LOV photosensory proteins in bacteria and archaea (31) whose biological roles remain in most cases elusive. Only recently, experiments showed that LOV domain-containing proteins found in several bacterial taxa, namely, a LOV sulfate transporter anti-sigma factor antagonist protein from the common soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis and LOV histidine kinases of the mammalian pathogen Brucella abortus (57) and the freshwater-dwelling microbe Caulobacter crescentus (44), mediate physiological responses toward environmental blue-light stimuli. The latter LOV domain-containing histidine kinases are blue-light sensitive, displaying a photochemistry similar to that of the plant phototropins with the blue-light stimulus inducing autophosphorylation in the kinase which in turn triggers the respective physiological response (8, 44, 57). Furthermore, a number of biochemical and photochemical studies demonstrated a conserved primary LOV photochemistry among several bacteria (8, 28, 30, 44, 57). Finally, only a few years after the identification of plant phototropin serine/threonine kinase systems with their blue-light-sensitive LOV sensory modules, experimental evidence has accumulated for the presence of similar systems in bacteria, namely, LOV histidine kinases regulating blue-light-dependent responses via phototropin-like autophosphorylation systems. These findings prompted us to investigate the evolutionary history as well as the distribution of the LOV sensor domain in the pro- and eukaryotic kingdoms. To this end, we have performed a phylogenetic analysis comprising 223 putative LOV sequences obtained from completely sequenced genomes of 22 eukaryotes, 115 bacteria, and 3 archaea.  相似文献   

15.
Phototropin (phot), a blue light (BL) receptor in plants, has two photoreceptive domains named LOV1 and LOV2 as well as a Ser/Thr kinase domain (KD) and acts as a BL-regulated protein kinase. A LOV domain harbors a flavin mononucleotide that undergoes a cyclic photoreaction upon BL excitation via a signaling state in which the inhibition of the kinase activity by LOV2 is negated. To understand the molecular mechanism underlying the BL-dependent activation of the kinase, the photochemistry, kinase activity, and molecular structure were studied with the phot of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Full-length and LOV2-KD samples of C. reinhardtii phot showed cyclic photoreaction characteristics with the activation of LOV- and BL-dependent kinase. Truncation of LOV1 decreased the photosensitivity of the kinase activation, which was well explained by the fact that the signaling state lasted for a shorter period of time compared with that of the phot. Small angle x-ray scattering revealed monomeric forms of the proteins in solution and detected BL-dependent conformational changes, suggesting an extension of the global molecular shapes of both samples. Constructed molecular model of full-length phot based on the small angle x-ray scattering data proved the arrangement of LOV1, LOV2, and KD for the first time that showed a tandem arrangement both in the dark and under BL irradiation. The models suggest that LOV1 alters its position relative to LOV2-KD under BL irradiation. This finding demonstrates that LOV1 may interact with LOV2 and modify the photosensitivity of the kinase activation through alteration of the duration of the signaling state in LOV2.  相似文献   

16.
Devising analysis tools for elucidating the regulatory mechanism of complex enzymes has been a challenging task for many decades. It generally requires the determination of the structural‐dynamical information of protein solvent systems far from equilibrium over multiple length and time scales, which is still difficult both theoretically and experimentally. To cope with the problem, we introduce a full‐residue space multiscale simulation method based on a combination of the kinetic Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics techniques, in which the rates of the rate‐determining processes are evaluated from a biomolecular forcefield on the fly during the simulation run by taking into account the full space of residues. To demonstrate its reliability and efficiency, we explore the light‐induced functional behavior of the full‐length phototropin1 from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr‐phot1) and its various subdomains. Our results demonstrate that in the dark state the light oxygen voltage‐2‐Jα (LOV2‐Jα) photoswitch inhibits the enzymatic activity of the kinase, whereas the LOV1‐Jα photoswitch controls the dimerization with the LOV2 domain. This leads to the repulsion of the LOV1‐LOV2 linker out of the interface region between both LOV domains, which results in a positively charged surface suitable for cell–membrane interaction. By contrast, in the light state, we observe that the distance between both LOV domains is increased and the LOV1‐LOV2 linker forms a helix–turn–helix (HTH) motif, which enables gene control through nucleotide binding. Finally, we find that the kinase is activated through the disruption of the Jα‐helix from the LOV2 domain, which is followed by a stretching of the activation loop (A‐loop) and broadening of the catalytic cleft of the kinase. Proteins 2014; 82:2018–2040. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The circadian clock controls the period, phasing, and amplitude of processes that oscillate with a near 24-h rhythm. One core group of clock components in Arabidopsis that controls the pace of the central oscillator is comprised of five PRR (pseudo-response regulator) proteins whose biochemical function in the clock remains unclear. Peak expression of TOC1 (timing of cab expression 1)/PRR1, PRR3, PRR5, PRR7, and PRR9 are each phased differently over the course of the day and loss of any PRR protein alters period. Here we show that, together with TOC1, PRR5 is the only other likely proteolytic substrate of the E3 ubiquitin ligase SCF(ZTL) within this PRR family. We further demonstrate a functional significance for the phosphorylated forms of PRR5, TOC1, and PRR3. Each PRR protein examined is nuclear-localized and is differentially phosphorylated over the circadian cycle. The more highly phosphorylated forms of PRR5 and TOC1 interact best with the F-box protein ZTL (ZEITLUPE), suggesting a mechanism to modulate their proteolysis. In vivo degradation of both PRR5 and ZTL is inhibited by blue light, likely the result of blue light photoperception by ZTL. TOC1 and PRR3 interact in vivo and phosphorylation of both is necessary for their optimal binding in vitro. Additionally, because PRR3 and ZTL both interact with TOC1 in vivo via the TOC1 N terminus, taken together these data suggest that the TOC1/PRR3 phosphorylation-dependent interaction may protect TOC1 from ZTL-mediated degradation, resulting in an enhanced amplitude of TOC1 cycling.  相似文献   

18.
Protein photosensors are versatile tools for studying ligand-regulated allostery and signaling. Fundamental to these processes is the amount of energy that can be provided by a photosensor to control downstream signaling events. Such regulation is exemplified by the phototropins--plant serine/threonine kinases that are activated by blue light via conserved LOV (light, oxygen and voltage) domains. The core photosensor of oat phototropin 1 is a LOV domain that interacts in a light-dependent fashion with an adjacent alpha-helix (J alpha) to control kinase activity. We used solution NMR measurements to quantify the free energy of the LOV domain-J alpha-helix binding equilibrium in the dark and lit states. These data indicate that light shifts this equilibrium by approximately 3.8 kcal mol(-1), thus quantifying the energy available through LOV-J alpha for light-driven allosteric regulation. This study provides insight into the energetics of light sensing by phototropins and benchmark values for engineering photoswitchable systems based on the LOV-J alpha interaction.  相似文献   

19.
The photosensor YtvA binds flavin mononucleotide and regulates the general stress reaction in Bacillus subtilis in response to blue light illumination. It belongs to the family of light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) proteins that were first described in plant phototropins and form a subgroup of the Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) superfamily. Here, we report the three-dimensional structure of the LOV domain of YtvA in its dark and light states. The protein assumes the global fold common to all PAS domains and dimerizes via a hydrophobic interface. Directly C-terminal to the core of the LOV domain, an alpha-helix extends into the solvent. Light absorption causes formation of a covalent bond between a conserved cysteine residue and atom C(4a) of the FMN ring, which triggers rearrangements throughout the LOV domain. Concomitantly, in the dark and light structures, the two subunits of the dimeric protein rotate relative to each other by 5 degrees . This small quaternary structural change is presumably a component of the mechanism by which the activity of YtvA is regulated in response to light. In terms of both structure and signaling mechanism, YtvA differs from plant phototropins and more closely resembles prokaryotic heme-binding PAS domains.  相似文献   

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