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Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes
[Image: see text] Cryptochromes (CRYs) are blue-light photoreceptors with known or presumed functions in light-dependent and light-independent gene regulation in plants and animals. Although the photochemistry of plant CRYs has been studied in some detail, the photochemical behavior of animal crypto...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
American Chemical Society
2009
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2739604/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19663499 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi901043s |
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author | Ozturk, Nuri Selby, Christopher P. Song, Sang-Hun Ye, Rui Tan, Chuang Kao, Ya-Ting Zhong, Dongping Sancar, Aziz |
author_facet | Ozturk, Nuri Selby, Christopher P. Song, Sang-Hun Ye, Rui Tan, Chuang Kao, Ya-Ting Zhong, Dongping Sancar, Aziz |
author_sort | Ozturk, Nuri |
collection | PubMed |
description | [Image: see text] Cryptochromes (CRYs) are blue-light photoreceptors with known or presumed functions in light-dependent and light-independent gene regulation in plants and animals. Although the photochemistry of plant CRYs has been studied in some detail, the photochemical behavior of animal cryptochromes remains poorly defined in part because it has been difficult to purify animal CRYs with their flavin cofactors. Here we describe the purification of type 4 CRYs of zebrafish and chicken as recombinant proteins with full flavin complement and compare the spectroscopic properties of type 4 and type 1 CRYs. In addition, we analyzed photoinduced proteolytic degradation of both types of CRYs in vivo in heterologous systems. We find that even though both types of CRYs contain stoichiometric flavin, type 1 CRY is proteolytically degraded by a light-initiated reaction in Drosophila S2, zebrafish Z3, and human HEK293T cell lines, but zebrafish CRY4 (type 4) is not. In vivo degradation of type 1 CRYs does not require continuous illumination, and a single light flash of 1 ms duration leads to degradation of about 80% of Drosophila CRY in 60 min. Finally, we demonstrate that in contrast to animal type 2 CRYs and Arabidopsis CRY1 neither insect type 1 nor type 4 CRYs have autokinase activities. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2739604 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2009 |
publisher | American Chemical Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-27396042009-09-08 Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes Ozturk, Nuri Selby, Christopher P. Song, Sang-Hun Ye, Rui Tan, Chuang Kao, Ya-Ting Zhong, Dongping Sancar, Aziz Biochemistry [Image: see text] Cryptochromes (CRYs) are blue-light photoreceptors with known or presumed functions in light-dependent and light-independent gene regulation in plants and animals. Although the photochemistry of plant CRYs has been studied in some detail, the photochemical behavior of animal cryptochromes remains poorly defined in part because it has been difficult to purify animal CRYs with their flavin cofactors. Here we describe the purification of type 4 CRYs of zebrafish and chicken as recombinant proteins with full flavin complement and compare the spectroscopic properties of type 4 and type 1 CRYs. In addition, we analyzed photoinduced proteolytic degradation of both types of CRYs in vivo in heterologous systems. We find that even though both types of CRYs contain stoichiometric flavin, type 1 CRY is proteolytically degraded by a light-initiated reaction in Drosophila S2, zebrafish Z3, and human HEK293T cell lines, but zebrafish CRY4 (type 4) is not. In vivo degradation of type 1 CRYs does not require continuous illumination, and a single light flash of 1 ms duration leads to degradation of about 80% of Drosophila CRY in 60 min. Finally, we demonstrate that in contrast to animal type 2 CRYs and Arabidopsis CRY1 neither insect type 1 nor type 4 CRYs have autokinase activities. American Chemical Society 2009-08-08 2009-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2739604/ /pubmed/19663499 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi901043s Text en Copyright © 2009 American Chemical Society http://pubs.acs.org This is an open-access article distributed under the ACS AuthorChoice Terms & Conditions. Any use of this article, must conform to the terms of that license which are available at http://pubs.acs.org. |
spellingShingle | Ozturk, Nuri Selby, Christopher P. Song, Sang-Hun Ye, Rui Tan, Chuang Kao, Ya-Ting Zhong, Dongping Sancar, Aziz Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title | Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title_full | Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title_fullStr | Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title_full_unstemmed | Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title_short | Comparative Photochemistry of Animal Type 1 and Type 4 Cryptochromes |
title_sort | comparative photochemistry of animal type 1 and type 4 cryptochromes |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2739604/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19663499 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi901043s |
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