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1.
The widely distributed phytochrome photoreceptors carry a bilin chromophore, which is covalently attached to the protein during a lyase reaction. In plant phytochromes, the natural chromophore is coupled by a thioether bond between its ring A ethylidene side chain and a conserved cysteine residue within the so-called GAF domain of the protein. Many bacterial phytochromes carry biliverdin as natural chromophore, which is coupled in a different manner to the protein. In phytochrome Agp1 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, biliverdin is covalently attached to a cysteine residue close to the N terminus (position 20). By testing different natural and synthetic biliverdin derivatives, it was found that the ring A vinyl side chain is used for chromophore attachment. Only those bilins that have ring A vinyl side chain were covalently attached, whereas bilins with an ethylidene or ethyl side chain were bound in a noncovalent manner. Phycocyanobilin, which belongs to the latter group, was however covalently attached to a mutant in which a cysteine was introduced into the GAF domain of Agp1 (position 249). It is proposed that the regions around positions 20 and 249 are in close contact and contribute both to the chromophore pocket. In competition experiments it was found that phycocyanobilin and biliverdin bind with similar strength to the wild type protein. However, in the V249C mutant, phycocyanobilin bound much more strongly than biliverdin. This finding could explain why during phytochrome evolution in cyanobacteria, the chromophore-binding site swapped from the N terminus into the GAF domain.  相似文献   

2.
Phytochromes are red/far red light photochromic photoreceptors that direct many photosensory behaviors in the bacterial, fungal, and plant kingdoms. They consist of an N-terminal domain that covalently binds a bilin chromophore and a C-terminal region that transmits the light signal, often through a histidine kinase relay. Using x-ray crystallography, we recently solved the first three-dimensional structure of a phytochrome, using the chromophore-binding domain of Deinococcus radiodurans bacterial phytochrome assembled with its chromophore, biliverdin IXalpha. Now, by engineering the crystallization interface, we have achieved a significantly higher resolution model. This 1.45A resolution structure helps identify an extensive buried surface between crystal symmetry mates that may promote dimerization in vivo. It also reveals that upon ligation of the C3(2) carbon of biliverdin to Cys(24), the chromophore A-ring assumes a chiral center at C2, thus becoming 2(R),3(E)-phytochromobilin, a chemistry more similar to that proposed for the attached chromophores of cyanobacterial and plant phytochromes than previously appreciated. The evolution of bacterial phytochromes to those found in cyanobacteria and higher plants must have involved greater fitness using more reduced bilins, such as phycocyanobilin, combined with a switch of the attachment site from a cysteine near the N terminus to one conserved within the cGMP phosphodiesterase/adenyl cyclase/FhlA domain. From analysis of site-directed mutants in the D. radiodurans phytochrome, we show that this bilin preference was partially driven by the change in binding site, which ultimately may have helped photosynthetic organisms optimize shade detection. Collectively, these three-dimensional structural results better clarify bilin/protein interactions and help explain how higher plant phytochromes evolved from prokaryotic progenitors.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Bacteriophytochromes constitute a light-sensing subgroup of sensory kinases with a chromophore-binding motif in the N-terminal half and a C-terminally located histidine kinase activity. The cyanobacterium Fremyella diplosiphon (also designated Calothrix sp.) expresses two sequentially very similar bacteriophytochromes, cyanobacterial phytochrome A (CphA) and cyanobacterial phytochrome B (CphB). Cyanobacterial phytochrome A has the canonical cysteine residue, by which covalent chromophore attachment is accomplished in the same manner as in plant phytochromes; however, its paralog cyanobacterial phytochrome B carries a leucine residue at that position. On the basis of in vitro experiments that showed, for both cyanobacterial phytochrome A and cyanobacterial phytochrome B, light-induced autophosphorylation and phosphate transfer to their cognate response regulator proteins RcpA and RcpB [Hübschmann T, Jorissen HJMM, B?rner T, G?rtner W & deMarsac NT (2001) Eur J Biochem268, 3383-3389], we aimed at the identification of a chromophore that is incorporated in vivo into cyanobacterial phytochrome B within the cyanobacterial cell. The approach was based on the introduction of a copy of cphB into the cyanobacterium via triparental conjugation. The His-tagged purified, recombinant protein (CphBcy) showed photoreversible absorption bands similar to those of plant and bacterial phytochromes, but with remarkably red-shifted maxima [lambda(max) 700 and 748 nm, red-absorbing (P(r)) and far red-absorbing (P(fr)) forms of phytochrome, respectively]. A comparison of the absorption maxima with those of the heterologously generated apoprotein, assembled with phycocyanobilin (lambda(max) 686 and 734 nm) or with biliverdin IXalpha (lambda(max) 700 and 750 +/- 2 nm), shows biliverdin IXalpha to be a genuine chromophore. The kinase activity of CphBcy and phosphotransfer to its cognate response regulator was found to be strictly P(r)-dependent. As an N-terminally located cysteine was found as an alternative covalent binding site for several bacteriophytochrome photoreceptors that bind biliverdin and lack the canonical cysteine residue (e.g. Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Deinococcus radiodurans), this corresponding residue in heterologously expressed cyanobacterial phytochrome B was mutated into a serine (C24S); however, there was no change in its spectral properties. On the other hand, the mutation of His267, which is located directly after the canonical cysteine, into alanine (H267A), caused complete loss of the capability of cyanobacterial phytochrome B to form a chromoprotein.  相似文献   

6.
Phytochromes are widely distributed photoreceptors with a bilin chromophore that undergo a typical reversible photoconversion between the two spectrally different forms, Pr and Pfr. The phytochrome Agp2 from Agrobacterium tumefaciens belongs to the group of bathy phytochromes that have a Pfr ground state as a result of the Pr to Pfr dark conversion. Agp2 has untypical spectral properties in the Pr form reminiscent of a deprotonated chromophore as confirmed by resonance Raman spectroscopy. UV/visible absorption spectroscopy showed that the pKa is >11 in the Pfr form and ∼7.6 in the Pr form. Unlike other phytochromes, photoconversion thus results in a pKa shift of more than 3 units. The Pr/Pfr ratio after saturating irradiation with monochromatic light is strongly pH-dependent. This is partially due to a back-reaction of the deprotonated Pr chromophore at pH 9 after photoexcitation as found by flash photolysis. The chromophore protonation and dark conversion were affected by domain swapping and site-directed mutagenesis. A replacement of the PAS or GAF domain by the respective domain of the prototypical phytochrome Agp1 resulted in a protonated Pr chromophore; the GAF domain replacement afforded an inversion of the dark conversion. A reversion was also obtained with the triple mutant N12S/Q190L/H248Q, whereas each single point mutant is characterized by decelerated Pr to Pfr dark conversion.  相似文献   

7.
Phytochromes are photochromic photoreceptors with a bilin chromophore that have been found in plants and bacteria. Typical bacterial phytochromes are composed of an N-terminal photosensory chromophore module and a C-terminal protein kinase. The former contains the chromophore, which allows phytochromes to adopt the two interconvertible spectral forms, Pr and Pfr. The N-terminal photosensory module of Agrobacterium phytochrome Agp1, Agp1-M15, was used for crystallization studies. The protein was either assembled with the natural chromophore biliverdin or a sterically locked synthetic biliverdin-derivative, termed 15Za. The last-named adduct does not undergo photoisomerization due to an additional carbon chain between the rings C and D of the chromophore. Both adducts could be crystallized, but the resolution was largely improved by the use of 15Za. Crystals of biliverdin-Agp1-M15 diffract to 6A resolution and belong to the tetragonal space group I422 with unit cell dimensions a = b = 171 Angstroms, c = 81 Angstroms, crystals of 15Za-Agp1-M15 belong to the same space group with similar unit cell dimensions a = b = 174 Angstroms, c = 80 Angstroms, but diffract to 3.4 Angstroms resolution. Assuming the asymmetric unit to be occupied by one monomer of 55kDa, the unit cell contains 54-55% solvent with a crystal volume per protein mass, V(m), of 2.7 Angstroms(3) Da(-1).  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
We performed steady state fluorescence measurements with phytochromes Agp1 and Agp2 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens and three mutants in which photoconversion is inhibited. These proteins were assembled with the natural chromophore biliverdin (BV), with phycoerythrobilin (PEB), which lacks a double bond in the ring C-D-connecting methine bridge, and with synthetic bilin derivatives in which the ring C-D-connecting methine bridge is locked. All PEB and locked chromophore adducts are photoinactive. According to fluorescence quantum yields, the adducts may be divided into four different groups: wild type BV adducts exhibiting a weak fluorescence, mutant BV adducts with about 10-fold enhanced fluorescence, adducts with locked chromophores in which the fluorescence quantum yields are around 0.02, and PEB adducts with a high quantum yield of around 0.5. Thus, the strong fluorescence of the PEB adducts is not reached by the locked chromophore adducts, although the photoconversion energy dissipation pathway is blocked. We therefore suggest that ring D of the bilin chromophore, which contributes to the extended π-electron system of the locked chromophores, provides an energy dissipation pathway that is independent on photoconversion.  相似文献   

10.
The ability of phytochromes (Phy) to act as photointerconvertible light switches in plants and microorganisms depends on key interactions between the bilin chromophore and the apoprotein that promote bilin attachment and photointerconversion between the spectrally distinct red light-absorbing Pr conformer and far red light-absorbing Pfr conformer. Using structurally guided site-directed mutagenesis combined with several spectroscopic methods, we examined the roles of conserved amino acids within the bilin-binding domain of Deinococcus radiodurans bacteriophytochrome with respect to chromophore ligation and Pr/Pfr photoconversion. Incorporation of biliverdin IXalpha (BV), its structure in the Pr state, and its ability to photoisomerize to the first photocycle intermediate are insensitive to most single mutations, implying that these properties are robust with respect to small structural/electrostatic alterations in the binding pocket. In contrast, photoconversion to Pfr is highly sensitive to the chromophore environment. Many of the variants form spectrally bleached Meta-type intermediates in red light that do not relax to Pfr. Particularly important are Asp-207 and His-260, which are invariant within the Phy superfamily and participate in a unique hydrogen bond matrix involving the A, B, and C pyrrole ring nitrogens of BV and their associated pyrrole water. Resonance Raman spectroscopy demonstrates that substitutions of these residues disrupt the Pr to Pfr protonation cycle of BV with the chromophore locked in a deprotonated Meta-R(c)-like photoconversion intermediate after red light irradiation. Collectively, the data show that a number of contacts contribute to the unique photochromicity of Phy-type photoreceptors. These include residues that fix the bilin in the pocket, coordinate the pyrrole water, and possibly promote the proton exchange cycle during photoconversion.  相似文献   

11.
《BBA》2023,1864(4):148996
Using ultrafast spectroscopy and site-specific mutagenesis, we demonstrate the central role of a conserved tyrosine within the chromophore binding pocket in the forward (Pr → Pfr) photoconversion of phytochromes. Taking GAF1 of the knotless phytochrome All2699g1 from Nostoc as representative member of phytochromes, it was found that the mutations have no influence on the early (<30 ps) dynamics associated with conformational changes of the chromophore in the excited state. Conversely, they drastically impact the extended protein-controlled excited state decay (>100 ps). Thus, the steric demand, position and H-bonding capabilities of the identified tyrosine control the chromophore photoisomerization while leaving the excited state chromophore dynamics unaffected. In effect, this residue operates as an isomerization-steric-gate that tunes the excited state lifetime and the photoreaction efficiency by modulating the available space of the chromophore and by stabilizing the primary intermediate Lumi-R. Understanding the role of such a conserved structural element sheds light on a key aspect of phytochrome functionality and provides a basis for rational design of optimized photoreceptors for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

12.
F Thümmler  A Beetz  W Rüdiger 《FEBS letters》1990,275(1-2):125-129
The polymerase chain reaction was carried out with primers hybridizing to conserved regions of the phytochrome genes. With DNA from the moss Ceratodon purpureus 5 overlapping fragments were obtained resulting in a continuous nucleotide sequence of 1474 bp. The deduced amino acid sequence showed homology of around 60% with all known phytochrome sequences. The sequences contained a conserved chromophore attachment site. In light-grown Ceratodon protonemata the phytochrome mRNA with the size of about 4.5 kb was detected.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The biochemical mechanism of phytochrome action is unknown. We have examined the proposal, based on sequence similarities to the sensor histidine kinase components of bacterial two-component signaling systems, that the phytochromes may be functional homologs of these kinases. Four amino acids, three highly conserved between the phytochrome and bacterial kinase molecules and the other, the histidine residue putatively the target of autophosphorylation, were changed singly in the oat phytochrome A sequence by in vitro site-directed mutagenesis, and the resultant mutant photo-receptor molecules were assayed for activity by overexpression in transgenic Arabidopsis. Three of the four mutant molecules retained activity equivalent to that of the unmutagenized parent sequence, whereas the fourth mutant could not be evaluated because of low expression. The data show that the former three mutagenized residues are not essential for phytochrome A function in transgenic Arabidopsis, but, because of the negative nature of the results, the possibility cannot be precluded that the photoreceptor functions as a protein kinase independent of these residues.Dedicated to Professor Eldon H. Newcomb in recognition of his contributions to cell biology  相似文献   

14.
The Pr --> Pfr phototransformation of the bacteriophytochrome Agp1 from Agrobacterium tumefaciens and the structures of the biliverdin chromophore in the parent states and the cryogenically trapped intermediate Meta-R(C) were investigated with resonance Raman spectroscopy and flash photolysis. Strong similarities with the resonance Raman spectra of plant phytochrome A indicate that in Agp1 the methine bridge isomerization state of the chromophore is ZZZasa in Pr and ZZEssa in Pfr, with all pyrrole nitrogens being protonated. Photoexcitation of Pr is followed by (at least) three thermal relaxation components in the formation of Pfr with time constants of 230 micros and 3.1 and 260 ms. H2O/D2O exchange reveals kinetic isotope effects of 1.9, 2.6, and 1.3 for the respective transitions that are accompanied by changes of the amplitudes. The second and the third relaxation correspond to the formation and decay of Meta-R(C), respectively. Resonance Raman measurements of Meta-R(C) indicate that the chromophore adopts a deprotonated ZZE configuration. Measurements with a pH indicator dye show that formation and decay of Meta-R(C) are associated with proton release and uptake, respectively. The stoichiometry of the proton release corresponds to one proton per photoconverted molecule. The coupling of transient chromophore deprotonation and proton release, which is likely to be an essential element in the Pr --> Pfr photocon-version mechanism of phytochromes in general, may play a crucial role for the structural changes in the final step of the Pfr formation that switch between the active and the inactive state of the photoreceptor.  相似文献   

15.
Phytochrome photoreceptors sense red and far-red light through photointerconversion between two stable conformations, a process mediated by a linear tetrapyrrole chromophore. Originally, phytochromes were thought to be confined to photosynthetic organisms including cyanobacteria, but they have been recently discovered in heterotrophic bacteria and fungi, where little is known about their functions. It was shown previously in the ascomycetous fungus Aspergillus nidulans that asexual sporulation is stimulated and sexual development repressed by red light. The effect was reminiscent of a phytochrome response, and indeed phytochrome-like proteins were detected in several fungal genomes. All fungal homologs are more similar to bacterial than plant phytochromes and have multifunctional domains where the phytochrome region and histidine kinase domain are combined in a single protein with a C-terminal response-regulator domain. Here, we show that the A. nidulans phytochrome FphA binds a biliverdin chromophore, acts as a red-light sensor, and represses sexual development under red-light conditions. FphA-GFP is cytoplasmic and excluded from the nuclei, suggesting that red-light photoperception occurs in the cytoplasm. This is the first phytochrome experimentally characterized outside the plant and bacterial kingdoms and the second type of fungal protein identified that functions in photoperception.  相似文献   

16.
Noack S  Michael N  Rosen R  Lamparter T 《Biochemistry》2007,46(13):4164-4176
Phytochromes are widely distributed photochromic biliprotein photoreceptors. Typical bacterial phytochromes such as Agrobacterium Agp1 have a C-terminal histidine kinase module; the N-terminal chromophore module induces conformational changes in the protein that lead to modulation of kinase activity. We show by protein cross-linking that the C-terminal histidine kinase module of Agp1 mediates stable dimerization. The fragment Agp1-M15, which comprises the chromophore module but lacks the histidine kinase module, can also form dimers. In this fragment, dimer formation was stronger for the far-red-absorbing form Pfr than for the red-absorbing form Pr. The same or similar behavior was found for Agp1-M15Delta9N and Agp1-M15Delta18N, which lack 9 and 18 amino acids of the N-terminus, respectively. The fragment Agp1-M20, which is derived from Agp1-M15 by truncation of the C-terminal "PHY domain" (191 amino acids), can also form dimers, but dimerization is independent of irradiation conditions. The cross-linking data also showed that the PHY domain is in tight contact with Lys 16 of the protein and that the nine N-terminal amino acids mediate oligomer formation. Limited proteolysis shows that the hinge region between the chromophore module and the histidine kinase and a part of the PHY domain become exposed upon Pr to Pfr photoconversion.  相似文献   

17.
Etiolated Avena seedlings grown in the presence of 4-amino-5-hexynoic acid, an inhibitor of 5-aminolevulinic acid synthesis in plants, contain less than 10% of the spectrally detectable levels of phytochrome found in untreated seedlings (Elich, T.D., and Lagarias, J.C. (1988) Plant Physiol. 88, 747-751). In this study, incubation of explants from such seedlings with [14C]biliverdin IX alpha led to rapid covalent incorporation of radiolabel into a single 124-kDa polypeptide in soluble protein extracts. Immunoprecipitation experiments confirmed that this protein was phytochrome. Parallel experiments were performed with four unlabeled linear tetrapyrroles, the naturally occurring biliverdin IX alpha isomer, two non-natural isomers, biliverdin XIII alpha and biliverdin III alpha, and phycocyanobilin-the cleaved prosthetic group of the light-harvesting antenna protein C-phycocyanin. In all cases, except for the III alpha isomer of biliverdin, a time-dependent recovery of photoreversible phytochrome was observed. The newly formed phytochrome obtained after incubation with biliverdin IX alpha exhibited spectral characteristics identical with those of the native protein. In contrast, the spectral properties of phytochromes formed during incubation with biliverdin XIII alpha and phycocyanobilin differed significantly from those of the native chromoprotein. These results indicate that biliverdin IX alpha is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of the phytochrome chromophore and that phytochromes with prosthetic groups derived from bilatrienes having non-natural D-ring substituents are photochromic.  相似文献   

18.
Photoisomerization of biliverdin (BV) chromophore triggers the photoresponse in native Agp1 bacteriophytochrome. We discuss heterogeneity in phytochrome Pr form to account for the shape of the absorption profile. We investigated different regions of the absorption profile by angle balanced polarization resolved femtosecond VIS pump–IR probe spectroscopy. We studied the Pr form of Agp1 with its natural chromophore and with a sterically locked 18Et-BV (locked Agp1). We followed the dynamics and orientations of the carbonyl stretching vibrations of ring D and ring A in their ground and electronically excited states. Photoisomerization of ring D is reflected by strong signals of the ring D carbonyl vibration. In contrast, orientational data on ring A show no rotation of ring A upon photoexcitation. Orientational data allow excluding a ZZZasa geometry and corroborates a nontwisted ZZZssa geometry of the chromophore. We found no proof for heterogeneity but identified a new, to our knowledge, electronic transition in the absorption profile at 644 nm (S0→S2). Excitation of the S0→S2 transition will introduce a more complex photodynamics compared with S0→S1 transition. Our approach provides fundamental information on disentanglement of absorption profiles, identification of chromophore structures, and determination of molecular groups involved in the photoisomerization process of photoreceptors.  相似文献   

19.
Phytochromes are photoreceptors with a bilin chromophore in which light triggers the conversion between the red-absorbing form Pr and the far-red-absorbing form Pfr. Agrobacterium tumefaciens has two phytochromes, Agp1 and Agp2, with antagonistic properties: in darkness, Agp1 converts slowly from Pfr to Pr, whereas Agp2 converts slowly from Pr to Pfr. In a previous study, we have assembled Agp1 with synthetic locked chromophores 15Za, 15Zs, 15Ea, and 15Es in which the C15=C16 double bond is fixed in either the E or Z configuration and the C14-C15 single bond is fixed in either the syn (s) or anti (a) conformation. In the present study, the locked chromophores 5Za and 5Zs were used for assembly with Agp1; in these chromophores, the C4=C5 double bond is fixed in the Z configuration, and the C5-C6 single bond is fixed in either the syn or anti conformation. All locked chromophores were also assembled with Agp2. The data showed that in both phytochromes the Pr chromophore adopts a C4=C5 Z C5-C6 syn C15=C16 Z C14-C15 anti stereochemistry and that in the Pfr chromophore the C15=C16 double bond has isomerized to the E configuration, whereas the C14-C15 single bond remains in the anti conformation. Photoconversion shifted the absorption maxima of the 5Zs adducts to shorter wavelengths, whereas the 5Za adducts were shifted to longer wavelengths. Thus, the C5-C6 single bond of the Pfr chromophore is rather in an anti conformation, supporting the previous suggestion that during photoconversion of phytochromes, a rotation around the ring A-B connecting single bond occurs.  相似文献   

20.
Phytochromes act as photoswitches between the red- and far-red absorbing parent states of phytochromes (Pr and Pfr). Plant phytochromes display an additional thermal conversion route from the physiologically active Pfr to Pr. The same reaction pattern is found in prototypical biliverdin-binding bacteriophytochromes in contrast to the reverse thermal transformation in bathy bacteriophytochromes. However, the molecular origin of the different thermal stabilities of the Pfr states in prototypical and bathy bacteriophytochromes is not known. We analyzed the structures of the chromophore binding pockets in the Pfr states of various bathy and prototypical biliverdin-binding phytochromes using a combined spectroscopic-theoretical approach. For the Pfr state of the bathy phytochrome from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the very good agreement between calculated and experimental Raman spectra of the biliverdin cofactor is in line with important conclusions of previous crystallographic analyses, particularly the ZZEssa configuration of the chromophore and its mode of covalent attachment to the protein. The highly homogeneous chromophore conformation seems to be a unique property of the Pfr states of bathy phytochromes. This is in sharp contrast to the Pfr states of prototypical phytochromes that display conformational equilibria between two sub-states exhibiting small structural differences at the terminal methine bridges A-B and C-D. These differences may mainly root in the interactions of the cofactor with the highly conserved Asp-194 that occur via its carboxylate function in bathy phytochromes. The weaker interactions via the carbonyl function in prototypical phytochromes may lead to a higher structural flexibility of the chromophore pocket opening a reaction channel for the thermal (ZZEZZZ) Pfr to Pr back-conversion.  相似文献   

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