首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Strauss HM  Hughes J  Schmieder P 《Biochemistry》2005,44(23):8244-8250
Precise structural information regarding the chromophore binding pocket is essential for an understanding of photochromicity and photoconversion in phytochrome photoreceptors. To this end, we are studying the 59 kDa N-terminal module of the cyanobacterial phytochrome Cph1 from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 in both thermally stable forms (Pr and Pfr) using solution-state NMR spectroscopy. The protein is deuterated, while the chromophore, phycocyanobilin (PCB), is isotopically labeled with (15)N or (13)C and (15)N. We have established a simple approach for preparing labeled PCB based on BG11 medium supplemented with an appropriate buffer and NaH(13)CO(3) and Na(15)NO(3) as sole carbon and nitrogen sources, respectively. We show that structural details of the chromophore binding pocket in both Pr and Pfr forms can be obtained using multidimensional heteronuclear solution-state NMR spectroscopy. Using one-dimensional (15)N NMR spectra, we show unequivocally that the chromophore is protonated in both Pr and Pfr states.  相似文献   

2.
The chromophore conformations of the red and far red light induced product states "Pfr" and "Pr" of the N-terminal photoreceptor domain Cph1-N515 from Synechocystis 6803 have been investigated by NMR spectroscopy, using specific 13C isotope substitutions in the chromophore. 13C-NMR spectroscopy in the Pfr and Pr states indicated reversible chemical shift differences predominantly of the C(4) carbon in ring A of the phycocyanobilin chromophore, in contrast to differences of C15 and C5, which were much less pronounced. Ab initio calculations of the isotropic shielding and optical transition energies identify a region for C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle changes where deshielding of C4 is correlated with red-shifted absorption. These could occur during thermal reactions on microsecond and millisecond timescales after excitation of Pr which are associated with red-shifted absorption. A reaction pathway involving a hula-twist at C5 could satisfy the observed NMR and visible absorption changes. Alternatively, C15 Z-E photoisomerization, although expected to lead to a small change of the chemical shift of C15, in addition to changes of the C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle could be consistent with visible absorption changes and the chemical shift difference at C4. NMR spectroscopy of a 13C-labeled chromopeptide provided indication for broadening due to conformational exchange reactions in the intact photoreceptor domain, which is more pronounced for the C- and D-rings of the chromophore. This broadening was also evident in the F2 hydrogen dimension from heteronuclear 1H-13C HSQC spectroscopy, which did not detect resonances for the 13C5-H, 13C10-H, and 13C15-H hydrogen atoms whereas strong signals were detected for the (13)C-labeled chromopeptide. The most pronounced 13C-chemical shift difference between chromopeptide and intact receptor domain was that of the 13C4-resonance, which could be consistent with an increased conformational energy of the C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle in the intact protein in the Pr state. Nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy experiments of the 13C-labeled chromopeptide, where chromophore-protein interactions are expected to be reduced, were consistent with a ZZZssa conformation, which has also been found for the biliverdin chromophore in the x-ray structure of a fragment of Deinococcus radiodurans bacteriophytochrome in the Pr form.  相似文献   

3.
Phytochrome is a key photoregulation pigment in plants which determines the strategy of their development throughout their life cycle. The major achievement in the recent investigations of the pigment is the discovery of its structural and functional heterogeneity: existence of a family of phytochromes (phyA-phyE) differing by the apoprotein was demonstrated. We approach this problem by investigating the chromophore component of the pigment with the use of the developed method of in vivo low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy of phytochrome. In etiolated plants, phytochrome fluorescence was detected and attributed to its red-light absorbing form (Pr) and the first photoproduct (lumi-R), and a scheme of the photoreaction in phytochrome, a distinction of which is the activation barrier in the excited state, was put forward. It was found that the spectroscopic and photochemical characteristics of Pr depend on the plant species and phytochrome mutants and overexpressors used, on localization of the pigment in organs and tissues, plant age, effect of preillumination and other physiological factors. This variability of the parameters was interpreted as the existence of at least two phenomenological Pr populations, which differ by their spectroscopic characteristics and activation parameters of the Pr --> lumi-R photoreaction (in particular, by the extent of the Pr --> lumi-R photoconversion at low temperatures, gamma1): the longer-wavelength major and variable by its content in plant tissues Pr' with gamma1 = 0.5 and the shorter-wavelength minor relatively constant Pr" with gamma1 < or = 0.05. The analysis of the phytochrome mutants and overexpressors allows a conclusion that phytochrome A (phyA), which dominates in etiolated seedlings, is presented by two isoforms attributed to Pr' and Pr" (phyA' and phyA", respectively). Phytochrome B (phyB) accounts for less than 10% of the total phytochrome fluorescence and belongs to the Pr" type. It is also characterized by the relatively low extent of the Pr photoconversion into the far-red-light absorbing physiologically active phytochrome form, Pfr. Fluorescence of the minor phytochromes (phyC-phyE) is negligible. The recently discovered phytochrome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis also belongs to the phenomenological Pr" type. PhyA' is a light-labile and soluble fraction, while phyA" is a relatively light-stable and, possibly, membrane (protein)-associated. Experiments with transgenic tobacco plants overexpressing full-length and C- and N-terminally truncated oat phytochrome A suggest that phyA' and phyA" might differ by the post-translational modification of the small N-terminal segment (amino acid residues 7-69) of the pigment. PhyA' is likely to be active in the de-etiolation processes while phyA" together with phyB, in green plants as revealed by the experiments on transgenic potato plants and phytochrome mutants of Arabidopsis and pea with altered levels of phytochromes A and B and modified phenotypes. And finally, within phyA', there are three subpopulations which are, possibly, different conformers of the chromophore. Thus, there is a hierarchical system of phytochromes which include: (i) different phytochromes; (ii) their post-translationally modified states and (iii) conformers within one molecular type. Its existence might be the rationale for the multiplicity of the photoregulation reactions in plants mediated by phytochrome.  相似文献   

4.
Lamparter T  Michael N 《Biochemistry》2005,44(23):8461-8469
Photoconversion of phytochrome from the red-absorbing form Pr to the far-red-absorbing form Pfr is initiated by a Z to E isomerization around the ring C-ring D connecting double bond; the chromophore undergoes a ZZZ to ZZE isomerization. In vivo, phytochrome chromophores are covalently bound to the protein, but several examples of noncovalent in vitro adducts have been reported which also undergo Pr to Pfr photoconversion. We show that free biliverdin or phycocyanobilin, highly enriched in the ZZE isomer, can easily be obtained from chromophores bound in a noncovalent manner to Agrobacterium phytochrome Agp1, and used for spectral assays. Photoconversion of free biliverdin in a methanol/HCl solution from ZZE to ZZZ proceeded with a quantum yield of 1.8%, but was negligible in neutral methanol solution, indicating that this process is proton-dependent. The ZZE form of biliverdin and phycocyanobilin were tested for their ability to assemble with Agp1 and cyanobacterial phytochrome Cph1, respectively. In both cases, a Pfr-like adduct was formed but the chromophore was bound in a noncovalent manner to the protein. Agp1 Pfr undergoes dark reversion to Pr; the same feature was found for the noncovalent ZZE adduct. After dark reversion, the chromophore became covalently bound to the protein. In analogy, the PCB chromophore became covalently bound to Cph1 upon irradiation with strong far-red light which initiated ZZE to ZZZ isomerization. Agrobacterium Agp2 belongs to a yet small group of phytochromes which also assemble in the Pr form but convert from Pr to Pfr in darkness. When the Agp2 apoprotein was assembled with the ZZE form of biliverdin, the formation of the final adduct was accelerated compared to the formation of the ZZZ control, indicating that the ZZE chromophore fits directly into the chromophore pocket of Agp2.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular models of phytochrome were generated to gain insight into structure-function relationships of this important, tetrapyrrole-containing plant protein. Molecular dynamics simulation of a 51-amino acid segment surrounding the chromophore attachment site in oat phytochrome (Cys-321) generated a folded structure. Cys-321 was located within this structure in a beta-turn at the entrance of a distinct pocket. When attached to this amino acid, a semicircular conformation of the Pr chromophore easily fit within the pocket, with the sidechain carboxyl groups in association with Arg and Lys residues in the peptide backbone. Models of Z and E isomers at the C-4 or C-15 double bonds were generated to produce potential conformations of the Pfr chromophore. Comparison of predicted reactivity of the tetrapyrrole, deduced from the models, with that described in the extensive literature on phytochrome clearly indicated that isomerization at C-4 is consistent with experimental data. Isomerization at C-4 caused the chromphore to move partially out of the pocket and brought the sidechain carboxyl groups and ring D to the surface of the polypeptide. This change in orientation is compatible with the observed interaction of Pfr with metal ions, which possibly is a component in the physiological activity of this protein.  相似文献   

6.
The resonance Raman spectra of the Pr state of the N-terminal 65-kDa fragment of plant phytochrome phyA have been measured and analyzed in terms of the configuration and conformation of the tetrapyrroles methine bridges. Spectra were obtained from phyA adducts reconstituted with the natural chromophore phytochromobilin as well as phycocyanobilin and its isotopomers labeled at the terminal methine bridges through (13)C/(12)C and D/H substitution. Upon comparing the resonance Raman spectra of the various phyA adducts, it was possible to identify the bands that originate from normal modes dominated by the stretching coordinates of the terminal methine bridges A-B and C-D. Quantum chemical calculations of the isolated tetrapyrroles reveal that these modes are sensitive indicators for the methine bridge configuration and conformation. For all phyA adducts, the experimental spectra of Pr including this marker band region are well reproduced by the calculated spectra obtained for the ZZZasa configuration. In contrast, there are substantial discrepancies between the experimental spectra and the spectra calculated for the ZZZssa configuration, which has been previously shown to be the chromophore geometry in the Pr state of the bacterial, biliverdin-binding phytochrome from Deinococcus radiodurans (Wagner, J. R., J. S. Brunzelle, K. T. Forest, R. D. Vierstra. 2005. Nature. 438:325-331). The results of this work, therefore, suggest that plant and bacterial (biliverdin-binding) phytochromes exhibit different structures in the parent state although the mechanism of the photoinduced reaction cycle may be quite similar.  相似文献   

7.
Photointerconversion between the red light-absorbing (Pr) form and the far-red light-absorbing (Pfr) form is the central feature that allows members of the phytochrome (Phy) superfamily to act as reversible switches in light perception. Whereas the chromophore structure and surrounding binding pocket of Pr have been described, those for Pfr have remained enigmatic for various technical reasons. Here we describe a novel pair of Phys from two thermophilic cyanobacteria, Synechococcus sp. OS-A and OS-B', that overcome several of these limitations. Like other cyanobacterial Phys, SyA-Cph1 and SyB-Cph1 covalently bind the bilin phycocyanobilin via their cGMP phosphodiesterase/adenyl cyclase/FhlA (GAF) domains and then assume the photointerconvertible Pr and Pfr states with absorption maxima at 630 and 704 nm, respectively. However, they are naturally missing the N-terminal Per/Arndt/Sim domain common to others in the Phy superfamily. Importantly, truncations containing only the GAF domain are monomeric, photochromic, and remarkably thermostable. Resonance Raman and NMR spectroscopy show that all four pyrrole ring nitrogens of phycocyanobilin are protonated both as Pr and following red light irradiation, indicating that the GAF domain by itself can complete the Pr to Pfr photocycle. (1)H-(15)N two-dimensional NMR spectra of isotopically labeled preparations of the SyB-Cph1 GAF domain revealed that a number of amino acids change their environment during photoconversion of Pr to Pfr, which can be reversed by subsequent photoconversion back to Pr. Through three-dimensional NMR spectroscopy before and after light photoexcitation, it should now be possible to define the movements of the chromophore and binding pocket during photoconversion. We also generated a series of strongly red fluorescent derivatives of SyB-Cph1, which based on their small size and thermostability may be useful as cell biological reporters.  相似文献   

8.
Park CM  Shim JY  Yang SS  Kang JG  Kim JI  Luka Z  Song PS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(21):6349-6356
The secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures of the Synechocystis Cph1 phytochrome were investigated by absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy, size exclusion chromatography, and limited proteolysis. The Cph1 protein was coexpressed with a bacterial thioredoxin in Escherichia coli, reconstituted in vitro with tetrapyrrole chromophores, and purified by chitin affinity chromatography. The resultant Cph1 holoproteins were essentially pure and had the specific absorbance ratio (SAR) of 0.8-0.9. Circular dichroism spectroscopy and limited proteolysis showed that the chromophore binding induced marked conformational changes in the Cph1 protein. The alpha-helical content increased to 42-44% in the holoproteins from 37% in the apoprotein. However, no significant difference in the secondary structure was detected between the Pr and Pfr forms. The tertiary structure of the Cph1 apoprotein appeared to be relatively flexible but became more compact and resistant to tryptic digestion upon chromophore binding. Interestingly, a small chromopeptide of about 30 kDa was still predominant even after longer tryptic digestion. The N-terminal location of this chromopeptide was confirmed by expression in E. coli and in vitro reconstitution with chromophores of the 32.5 kDa N-terminal fragment of the Cph1 protein. This chromopeptide was fully photoreversible with the spectral characteristic similar to that of the full-size Cph1 protein. The Cph1 protein forms dimers through the C-terminal region. These results suggest that the prokaryotic Cph1 phytochrome shares the structural and conformational characteristics of plant phytochromes, such as the two-domain structure consisting of the relatively compact N-terminal and the relatively flexible C-terminal regions, in addition to the chromophore-induced conformational changes.  相似文献   

9.
The red/far-red-sensing biological photoreceptor phytochrome is a paradigmatic two-state signaling system. The two thermally stable states are interconverted via a photoreaction of the covalently bound tetrapyrrole chromophore. Applying recently developed solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance, we study both the chromophore and its protein pocket in the Pr (red-absorbing) and Pfr (far-red-absorbing) states. The observations show that the phototransformation combines local chemical reactions with a mesoscopic transition of order. Both the chromophore and its binding pocket are quasi-liquid and disordered in Pr, yet quasi-solid and ordered in Pfr. Possible biochemical implications are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Phytochromes are biliprotein photoreceptors that can be photoswitched between red-light-absorbing state (Pr) and far-red-light-absorbing state (Pfr). Although three-dimensional structures of both states have been reported, the photoconversion and intramolecular signaling mechanisms are still unclear. Here, we report UV-Vis absorbance, fluorescence and CD spectroscopy along with various photochemical parameters of the wild type and Y263F, Y263H and Y263S mutants of the Cph1 photosensory module, as well as a 2.0-Å-resolution crystal structure of the Y263F mutant in its Pr ground state. Although Y263 is conserved, we show that the aromatic character but not the hydroxyl group of Y263 is important for Pfr formation. The crystal structure of the Y263F mutant (Protein Data Bank ID: 3ZQ5) reaffirms the ZZZssa chromophore configuration and provides a detailed picture of its binding pocket, particularly conformational heterogeneity around the chromophore. Comparison with other phytochrome structures reveals differences in the relative position of the PHY (phytochrome specific) domain and the interaction of the tongue with the extreme N-terminus. Our data support the notion that native phytochromes in their Pr state are structurally heterogeneous.  相似文献   

11.
A quantum mechanics (QM)/molecular mechanics (MM) hybrid method was applied to the Pr state of the cyanobacterial phytochrome Cph1 to calculate the Raman spectra of the bound PCB cofactor. Two QM/MM models were derived from the atomic coordinates of the crystal structure. The models differed in the protonation site of His260 in the chromophore-binding pocket such that either the δ-nitrogen (M-HSD) or the ɛ-nitrogen (M-HSE) carried a hydrogen. The optimized structures of the two models display small differences specifically in the orientation of His260 with respect to the PCB cofactor and the hydrogen bond network at the cofactor-binding site. For both models, the calculated Raman spectra of the cofactor reveal a good overall agreement with the experimental resonance Raman (RR) spectra obtained from Cph1 in the crystalline state and in solution, including Cph1 adducts with isotopically labeled PCB. However, a distinctly better reproduction of important details in the experimental spectra is provided by the M-HSD model, which therefore may represent an improved structure of the cofactor site. Thus, QM/MM calculations of chromoproteins may allow for refining crystal structure models in the chromophore-binding pocket guided by the comparison with experimental RR spectra. Analysis of the calculated and experimental spectra also allowed us to identify and assign the modes that sensitively respond to chromophore-protein interactions. The most pronounced effect was noted for the stretching mode of the methine bridge A-B adjacent to the covalent attachment site of PCB. Due a distinct narrowing of the A-B methine bridge bond angle, this mode undergoes a large frequency upshift as compared with the spectrum obtained by QM calculations for the chromophore in vacuo. This protein-induced distortion of the PCB geometry is the main origin of a previous erroneous interpretation of the RR spectra based on QM calculations of the isolated cofactor.Abbreviations: Agp1, phytochrome from Agrobacterium tumefaciens; α-CPC, α-subunit of C-phycocyanin; BV, biliverdin IXα; B3LYP, three-parameter exchange functional according to Becke, Lee, Yang, and Parr; DFT, density functional theory; DrBphP, phytochrome from Deinococcus radiodurans; GAF, domain found in cGMP-specific phosphodiesterases; MM, molecular mechanics; MD, molecular dynamics; N-H ip, N-H in-plane bending; PCB, phycocyanobilin; PED, potential energy distribution; phyA, plant phytochrome; Pr, Pfr, red- and far-red absorbing parent states of phytochrome; PΦB, phytochromobilin; QM, quantum mechanics; RMSD, root mean-square deviation; RR, resonance Raman  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence lifetimes of 'large (mol. wt. 120,000) and 'small' (mol. wt. 60,000) phytochromes isolated from oat and rye seedlings grown in the dark have been measured at 199 K and 298 K. Phytochrome model compounds have also been studied by phase modulation fluorometrically at 77 K for comparison with lifetime data for phytochrome. It was found that the fluorescence lifetime of 'large' phytochrome was significantly shorter than that of 'small' phytochrome and its chromophore models. The phytochrome chromophore of Pr form has been analyzed by fluorescence polarization, CD, and molecular orbital methods. The fluorescence excitation polarization of 'small' phytochrome and the chromophore model in buffer/glycerol mixture (3 : 1, v/v) at 77 K is very hight (0.4) at the main absorption band and is negative (--0.1) and close to 0 in the near ultraviolet band, respectively. Analyses of the spectroscopic data suggest that the chromophore conformation of Pr and Pfr forms of phytochrome are essentially identical. The induced ellipticity of 'large' rye phytochrome in the blue and near ultraviolet regions was found to be significantly higher than that of 'small' phytochrome, indicating that the binding interaction between the phytochrome chromophore and apoprotein is much tighter in the former than in the latter. In addition, the excitation energy transfer does occur from Trp residue(s) to the chromophore in 'large' phytochrome but not in 'small' Pr. This illustrates one feature of the role played by the large molecular weight apoprotein in the binding site interactions and primary photoprocesses of Pr. Finally, a plausible model for the primary photoprocesses and the mechanism of phytochrome interactions triggered by the Pr leads to Pfr phototransformation have been proposed on the basis of the above results.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated mutants of phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803 in order to study chromophore-protein interactions. Cph1Delta2, the 514-residue N-terminal sensor module produced as a recombinant His6-tagged apoprotein in Escherichia coli, autoassembles in vitro to form a holoprotein photochemically indistinguishable from the full-length product. We generated 12 site-directed mutants of Cph1Delta2, focusing on conserved residues which might be involved in chromophore-protein autoassembly and photoconversion. Folding, phycocyanobilin-binding and Pr-->Pfr photoconversion were analysed using CD and UV-visible spectroscopy. MALDI-TOF-MS confirmed C259 as the chromophore attachment site. C259L is unable to attach the chromophore covalently but still autoassembles to form a red-shifted photochromic holoprotein. H260Q shows UV-visible properties similar to the wild-type at pH 7.0 but both Pr and Pfr (reversibly) bleach at pH 9.0, indicating that the imidazole side chain buffers chromophore protonation. Mutations at E189 disturbed folding but the residue is not essential for chromophore-protein autoassembly. In D207A, whereas red irradiation of the ground state leads to bleaching of the red Pr band as in the wild-type, a Pfr-like peak does not arise, implicating D207 as a proton donor for a deprotonated intermediate prior to Pfr. UV-Vis spectra of both H260Q under alkaline conditions and D207A point to a particular significance of protonation in the Pfr state, possibly implying proton migration (release and re-uptake) during Pr-->Pfr photoconversion. The findings are discussed in relation to the recently published 3D structure of a bacteriophytochrome fragment.  相似文献   

14.
Femtosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was employed to characterize for the first time the primary photoisomerization dynamics of a bacterial phytochrome system in the two thermally stable states of the photocycle. The 85-kDa phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 expressed in Escherichia coli was reconstituted with phycocyanobilin (Cph1-PCB) and phycoerythrobilin (Cph1-PEB). The red-light-absorbing form Pr of Cph1-PCB shows an approximately 150 fs relaxation in the S(1) state after photoexcitation at 650 nm. The subsequent Z-E isomerization between rings C and D of the linear tetrapyrrole-chromophore is best described by a distribution of rate constants with the first moment at (16 ps)(-1). Excitation at 615 nm leads to a slightly broadened distribution. The reverse E-Z isomerization, starting from the far-red-absorbing form Pfr, is characterized by two shorter time constants of 0.54 and 3.2 ps. In the case of Cph1-PEB, double-bond isomerization does not take place, and the excited-state lifetime extends into the nanosecond regime. Besides a stimulated emission rise time between 40 and 150 fs, no fast relaxation processes are observed. This suggests that the chromophore-protein interaction along rings A, B, and C does not contribute much to the picosecond dynamics observed in Cph1-PCB but rather the region around ring D near the isomerizing C(15) [double bond] C(16) double bond. The primary reaction dynamics of Cph1-PCB at ambient temperature is found to exhibit very similar features as those described for plant type A phytochrome, i.e., a relatively slow Pr, and a fast Pfr, photoreaction. This suggests that the initial reactions were established already before evolution of plant phytochromes began.  相似文献   

15.
Park CM  Kim JI  Yang SS  Kang JG  Kang JH  Shim JY  Chung YH  Park YM  Song PS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(35):10840-10847
It now appears that photosynthetic prokaryotes and lower eukaryotes possess higher plant phytochrome-like proteins. In this work, a second phytochrome-like gene was isolated, in addition to the recently identified Cph1 phytochrome, from the Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and its gene product was characterized photochemically. The open reading frame sll0821 (designated cph2 in this work) has structural characteristics similar to those of the plant phytochromes and the Synechocystis Cph1 with high amino acid sequence homology in the N-terminal chromophore binding domain. The predicted Cph2 protein consists of 1276 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 145 kDa. Interestingly, the Cph2 protein has two putative chromophore binding domains, one around Cys-129 and the other around Cys-1022. The Cph2 was overexpressed in E. coli as an Intein/CBD (chitin binding domain) fusion and in vitro reconstituted with phycocyanobilin (PCB) or phytochromobilin (PPhiB). Both the Cph2-PCB and Cph2-PPhiB adducts showed the typical photochromic reversibility with the difference spectral maxima at 643/690 and 655/701 nm, respectively. The Cys-129 was confirmed to be the chromophore binding residue by in vitro mutagenesis and Zn(2+) fluorescence. The microenvironment of the chromophore in Cph2 seems to be similar to that in plant phytochromes. The cph2 gene expression was dark-induced and down-regulated to a basal level by light, like the cph1 gene. These observations suggest that Synechocystis species have multiple photosensory proteins, probably with distinct roles, as in higher plants.  相似文献   

16.
Resonance Raman analysis of the Pr and Pfr forms of phytochrome   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
S P Fodor  J C Lagarias  R A Mathies 《Biochemistry》1990,29(50):11141-11146
Resonance Raman vibrational spectra of the Pr and Pfr forms of oat phytochrome have been obtained at room temperature. When Pr is converted to Pfr, new bands appear in the C = C and C = N stretching region at 1622, 1599, and 1552 cm-1, indicating that a major structural change of the chromophore has occurred. The Pr to Pfr conversion results in an 11 cm-1 lowering of the N-H rocking band from 1323 to 1312 cm-1. Normal mode calculations correlate this frequency drop with a Z----E isomerization about the C15 = C16 bond. A line at 803 cm-1 in Pr is replaced by an unusually intense mode at 814 cm-1 in Pfr. Calculations on model tetrapyrrole chromophores suggest that these low-wavenumber modes are hydrogen out-of-plane (HOOP) wagging vibrations of the bridging C15 methine hydrogen and that both the intensity and frequency of the C15 HOOP mode are sensitive to the geometry around the C14-C15 and C15 = C16 bonds. The large intensity of the 814-cm-1 mode in Pfr indicates that the chromophore is highly distorted from planarity around the C15 methine bridge. If the Pr----Pfr conversion does involve a C15 = C16 Z----E isomerization, then the intensity of the C15 HOOP mode in Pfr argues that the chromophore has an E,anti conformation. On the basis of a comparison with the vibrational calculations, the low frequency (803 cm-1) and the reduced intensity of the C15 HOOP mode in Pr suggest that the chromophore in Pr adopts the C15-Z,syn conformation.  相似文献   

17.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was used to analyze the chromophore structure in the parent states Pr and Pfr of plant phytochrome phyA and the respective photoproducts lumi-R and lumi-F. The spectra were obtained from phyA adducts assembled with either uniformly or selectively isotope-labeled phytochromobilin and phycocyanobilin. The interpretation of the experimental spectra is based on the spectra of chromophore models calculated by density functional theory. Global 13C-labeling of the tetrapyrrole allows for the discrimination between chromophore and protein bands in the Fourier transform infrared difference spectra. All infrared difference spectra display a prominent difference band attributable to a stretching mode with large contributions from the methine bridge between the inner pyrrole rings (B-C stretching). Due to mode coupling, frequencies and isotopic shifts of this mode suggest that the Pr chromophore may adopt a distorted ZZZssa or ZZZasa geometry with a twisted A-B methine bridge. The transition to lumi-R is associated with only minor changes of the amide I bands indicating limited protein structural changes during the isomerization site of the C-D methine bridge. Major protein structural changes occur upon the transition to Pfr in which the chromophore adopts a ZZEssa or ZZEasa-like state. In addition, specific interactions with the protein alter the structure of the B-C methine bridge as concluded from the substantial downshift of the respective stretching mode. These interactions are removed during the photoreaction to lumi-F (ZZEZZZ), which involves only small protein structural changes.  相似文献   

18.
The phytochrome family of red/far-red photoreceptors has been optimized to support photochemical isomerization of a bound bilin chromophore, a process that triggers a conformational change and modulates biochemical output from the surrounding protein scaffold. Recent studies have established that the efficiency of this photochemical process is profoundly altered by mutation of a conserved tyrosine residue (Tyr176) within the bilin-binding GAF domain of the cyanobacterial phytochrome Cph1 [Fischer, A. J., and Lagarias, J. C. (2004) Harnessing phytochrome's glowing potential, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101, 17334-17339]. Here, we show that the equivalent mutation in plant phytochromes behaves similarly, indicating that the function of this tyrosine in the primary photochemical mechanism is conserved. Saturation mutagenesis of Tyr176 in Cph1 establishes that no other residue can support comparably efficient photoisomerization. The spectroscopic consequences of Tyr176 mutations also reveal that Tyr176 regulates the conversion of the porphyrin-like conformation of the bilin precursor to a more extended conformation. The porphyrin-binding ability of the Tyr176Arg mutant protein indicates that Tyr176 also regulates the ligand-binding specificity of apophytochrome. On the basis of the hydrogen-bonding ability of Tyr176 substitutions that support the nonphotochemical C15-Z,syn to C15-Z,anti interconversion, we propose that Tyr176 orients the carboxyl side chain of a conserved acidic residue to stabilize protonation of the bilin chromophore. A homology model of the GAF domain of Cph1 predicts a C5-Z,syn, C10-Z,syn, C15-Z,anti configuration for the chromophore and implicates Glu189 as the proposed acidic residue stabilizing the extended conformation, an interpretation consistent with site-directed mutagenesis of this conserved acidic residue.  相似文献   

19.
The 39-kDa fragment of oat phytochrome phyA, obtained by tryptic digestion at the amino acids 65 and 425, was studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The parent state P(r) reveals far-reaching similarities with that of the native phytochrome implying that the structures of the tetrapyrrole chromophore and its immediate protein environment are not affected by the proteolysis. However, the resonance Raman spectrum of the final product of the P(r) phototransformation, denoted as P(bl), is more closely related to that of the P(fr) precursor of the native phytochrome, i.e. meta-R(C), rather than to that of P(fr) itself. The resonance Raman spectra indicate a high conformational flexibility of the chromophore in P(bl) so that, unlike in P(fr), the tetrapyrrole rings C and D adopt a largely coplanar conformation. The protein interactions with ring D of the chromophore, which in the native phytochrome stabilize the specific chromophore structure of P(fr), cannot be established in the 39-kDa fragment due to the lack of the major C-terminal part of the protein. These findings, furthermore, support the view that the meta-R(C)-->P(fr) transition is associated with a coupling of chromophore and protein structural changes that represent crucial events for the photoactivation of phytochrome.  相似文献   

20.
Phytochromes are photochromic biliproteins found in plants as well as in some cyanotrophic, photoautotrophic and heterotrophic bacteria. In many bacteria, their function is largely unknown. Here we describe the biochemical and spectroscopic characterization of recombinant bacterial phytochrome from the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PaBphP). The recombinant protein displays all the characteristic features of a bonafide phytochrome. In contrast with cyanobacteria and plants, the chromophore of this bacterial phytochrome is biliverdin IXalpha, which is produced by the heme oxygenase BphO in P. aeruginosa. This chromophore was shown to be covalently attached via its A-ring endo-vinyl group to a cysteine residue outside the defined bilin lyase domain of plant and cyanobacterial phytochromes. Site-directed mutagenesis identified Cys12 and His247 as being important for chromophore binding and photoreversibility, respectively. PaBphP is synthesized in the dark in the red-light-absorbing Pr form and immediately converted into a far-red-light-absorbing Pfr-enriched form. It shows the characteristic red/far-red-light-induced photoreversibility of phytochromes. A chromophore analog that lacks the C15/16 double bond was used to show that this photoreversibility is due to a 15Z/15E isomerization of the biliverdin chromophore. Autophosphorylation of PaBphP was demonstrated, confirming its role as a sensor kinase of a bacterial two-component signaling system.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号