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Structural basis for light control of cell development revealed by crystal structures of a myxobacterial phytochrome

Authors :
Nicole C. Woitowich
Andrei S. Halavaty
Patricia Waltz
Christopher Kupitz
Joseph Valera
Gregory Tracy
Kevin D. Gallagher
Elin Claesson
Takanori Nakane
Suraj Pandey
Garrett Nelson
Rie Tanaka
Eriko Nango
Eiichi Mizohata
Shigeki Owada
Kensure Tono
Yasumasa Joti
Angela C. Nugent
Hardik Patel
Ayesha Mapara
James Hopkins
Phu Duong
Dorina Bizhga
Svetlana E. Kovaleva
Rachael St. Peter
Cynthia N. Hernandez
Wesley B. Ozarowski
Shatabdi Roy-Chowdhuri
Jay-How Yang
Petra Edlund
Heikki Takala
Janne Ihalainen
Jennifer Brayshaw
Tyler Norwood
Ishwor Poudyal
Petra Fromme
John C. H. Spence
Keith Moffat
Sebastian Westenhoff
Marius Schmidt
Emina A. Stojković
Source :
IUCrJ, Vol 5, Iss 5, Pp 619-634 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
International Union of Crystallography, 2018.

Abstract

Phytochromes are red-light photoreceptors that were first characterized in plants, with homologs in photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic bacteria known as bacteriophytochromes (BphPs). Upon absorption of light, BphPs interconvert between two states denoted Pr and Pfr with distinct absorption spectra in the red and far-red. They have recently been engineered as enzymatic photoswitches for fluorescent-marker applications in non-invasive tissue imaging of mammals. This article presents cryo- and room-temperature crystal structures of the unusual phytochrome from the non-photosynthetic myxobacterium Stigmatella aurantiaca (SaBphP1) and reveals its role in the fruiting-body formation of this photomorphogenic bacterium. SaBphP1 lacks a conserved histidine (His) in the chromophore-binding domain that stabilizes the Pr state in the classical BphPs. Instead it contains a threonine (Thr), a feature that is restricted to several myxobacterial phytochromes and is not evolutionarily understood. SaBphP1 structures of the chromophore binding domain (CBD) and the complete photosensory core module (PCM) in wild-type and Thr-to-His mutant forms reveal details of the molecular mechanism of the Pr/Pfr transition associated with the physiological response of this myxobacterium to red light. Specifically, key structural differences in the CBD and PCM between the wild-type and the Thr-to-His mutant involve essential chromophore contacts with proximal amino acids, and point to how the photosignal is transduced through the rest of the protein, impacting the essential enzymatic activity in the photomorphogenic response of this myxobacterium.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20522525
Volume :
5
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
IUCrJ
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.56c4f1741084155bcfa230773aaee98
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2052252518010631