Article

Phycoviolobilin formation and spectral tuning in the DXCF cyanobacteriochrome subfamily.

Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis, California 95616, United States.
Biochemistry (impact factor: 3.42). 02/2012; 51(7):1449-63. DOI:10.1021/bi201783j pp.1449-63
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Phytochromes are red/far-red photosensory proteins that regulate adaptive responses to light via photoswitching of cysteine-linked linear tetrapyrrole (bilin) chromophores. The related cyanobacteriochromes (CBCRs) extend the photosensory range of the phytochrome superfamily to shorter wavelengths of visible light. CBCRs and phytochromes share a conserved Cys residue required for bilin attachment. In one CBCR subfamily, often associated with a blue/green photocycle, a second Cys lies within a conserved Asp-Xaa-Cys-Phe (DXCF) motif and is essential for the blue/green photocycle. Such DXCF CBCRs use isomerization of the phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophore into the related phycoviolobilin (PVB) to shorten the conjugated system for sensing green light. We here use recombinant expression of individual CBCR domains in Escherichia coli to survey the DXCF subfamily from the cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme. We describe ten new photoreceptors with well-resolved photocycles and three additional photoproteins with overlapping dark-adapted and photoproduct states. We show that the ability of this subfamily to form PVB or retain PCB provides a powerful mechanism for tuning the photoproduct absorbance, with blue-absorbing dark states leading to a broad range of photoproducts absorbing teal, green, yellow, or orange light. Moreover, we use a novel green/teal CBCR that lacks the blue-absorbing dark state to demonstrate that PVB formation requires the DXCF Cys residue. Our results demonstrate that this subfamily exhibits much more spectral diversity than had been previously appreciated.

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Keywords

bilin attachment
 
blue-absorbing dark states
 
blue/green photocycle
 
CBCR subfamily
 
conserved Cys residue
 
cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme
 
cysteine-linked linear tetrapyrrole
 
DXCF CBCRs use isomerization
 
DXCF Cys residue
 
DXCF subfamily
 
Escherichia coli
 
individual CBCR domains
 
novel green/teal CBCR
 
photoproduct absorbance
 
photoproducts absorbing teal
 
regulate adaptive responses
 
related phycoviolobilin
 
second Cys
 
spectral diversity
 
well-resolved photocycles