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Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase

Sensing of red and far-red light by bacteriophytochromes involves intricate interactions between their bilin chromophore and the protein environment. The light-triggered rearrangements of the cofactor configuration and eventually the protein conformation enable bacteriophytochromes to interact with...

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Autores principales: Buhrke, David, Gourinchas, Geoffrey, Müller, Melanie, Michael, Norbert, Hildebrandt, Peter, Winkler, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956517/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31801828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA119.011915
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author Buhrke, David
Gourinchas, Geoffrey
Müller, Melanie
Michael, Norbert
Hildebrandt, Peter
Winkler, Andreas
author_facet Buhrke, David
Gourinchas, Geoffrey
Müller, Melanie
Michael, Norbert
Hildebrandt, Peter
Winkler, Andreas
author_sort Buhrke, David
collection PubMed
description Sensing of red and far-red light by bacteriophytochromes involves intricate interactions between their bilin chromophore and the protein environment. The light-triggered rearrangements of the cofactor configuration and eventually the protein conformation enable bacteriophytochromes to interact with various protein effector domains for biological modulation of diverse physiological functions. Excitation of the holoproteins by red or far-red light promotes the photoconversion to their far-red light–absorbing Pfr state or the red light-absorbing Pr state, respectively. Because prototypical bacteriophytochromes have a parallel dimer architecture, it is generally assumed that symmetric activation with two Pfr state protomers constitutes the signaling-active species. However, the bacteriophytochrome from Idiomarina species A28L (IsPadC) has recently been reported to enable long-range signal transduction also in asymmetric dimers containing only one Pfr protomer. By combining crystallography, hydrogen–deuterium exchange coupled to MS, and vibrational spectroscopy, we show here that Pfr of IsPadC is in equilibrium with an intermediate “Pfr-like” state that combines features of Pfr and Meta-R states observed in other bacteriophytochromes. We also show that structural rearrangements in the N-terminal segment (NTS) can stabilize this Pfr-like state and that the PHY-tongue conformation of IsPadC is partially uncoupled from the initial changes in the NTS. This uncoupling enables structural asymmetry of the overall homodimeric assembly and allows signal transduction to the covalently linked physiological diguanylate cyclase output module in which asymmetry might play a role in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The functional differences to other phytochrome systems identified here highlight opportunities for using additional red-light sensors in artificial sensor–effector systems.
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spelling pubmed-69565172020-01-14 Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase Buhrke, David Gourinchas, Geoffrey Müller, Melanie Michael, Norbert Hildebrandt, Peter Winkler, Andreas J Biol Chem Protein Structure and Folding Sensing of red and far-red light by bacteriophytochromes involves intricate interactions between their bilin chromophore and the protein environment. The light-triggered rearrangements of the cofactor configuration and eventually the protein conformation enable bacteriophytochromes to interact with various protein effector domains for biological modulation of diverse physiological functions. Excitation of the holoproteins by red or far-red light promotes the photoconversion to their far-red light–absorbing Pfr state or the red light-absorbing Pr state, respectively. Because prototypical bacteriophytochromes have a parallel dimer architecture, it is generally assumed that symmetric activation with two Pfr state protomers constitutes the signaling-active species. However, the bacteriophytochrome from Idiomarina species A28L (IsPadC) has recently been reported to enable long-range signal transduction also in asymmetric dimers containing only one Pfr protomer. By combining crystallography, hydrogen–deuterium exchange coupled to MS, and vibrational spectroscopy, we show here that Pfr of IsPadC is in equilibrium with an intermediate “Pfr-like” state that combines features of Pfr and Meta-R states observed in other bacteriophytochromes. We also show that structural rearrangements in the N-terminal segment (NTS) can stabilize this Pfr-like state and that the PHY-tongue conformation of IsPadC is partially uncoupled from the initial changes in the NTS. This uncoupling enables structural asymmetry of the overall homodimeric assembly and allows signal transduction to the covalently linked physiological diguanylate cyclase output module in which asymmetry might play a role in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The functional differences to other phytochrome systems identified here highlight opportunities for using additional red-light sensors in artificial sensor–effector systems. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2020-01-10 2019-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6956517/ /pubmed/31801828 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA119.011915 Text en © 2020 Buhrke et al. Author's Choice—Final version open access under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Protein Structure and Folding
Buhrke, David
Gourinchas, Geoffrey
Müller, Melanie
Michael, Norbert
Hildebrandt, Peter
Winkler, Andreas
Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title_full Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title_fullStr Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title_full_unstemmed Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title_short Distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
title_sort distinct chromophore–protein environments enable asymmetric activation of a bacteriophytochrome-activated diguanylate cyclase
topic Protein Structure and Folding
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956517/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31801828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA119.011915
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