Structural communication between the chromophore-binding pocket and the N-terminal extension in plant phytochrome phyB

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Abstract

The N-terminal extension (NTE) of plant phytochromes has been suggested to play a functional role in signaling photoinduced structural changes. Here, we use resonance Raman spectroscopy to study the effect of the NTE on the chromophore structure of B-type phytochromes from two evolutionarily distant plants. NTE deletion seems to have no effect on the chromophore in the inactive Pr state, but alters the torsion of the C-D ring methine bridge and the surrounding hydrogen bonding network in the physiologically active Pfr state. These changes are accompanied by a shift of the conformational equilibrium between two Pfr substates, which might affect the thermal isomerization rate of the C-D double bond and, thus, account for the effect of the NTE on the dark reversion kinetics.

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Velázquez Escobar, F., Buhrke, D., Fernandez Lopez, M., Shenkutie, S. M., von Horsten, S., Essen, L. O., … Hildebrandt, P. (2017). Structural communication between the chromophore-binding pocket and the N-terminal extension in plant phytochrome phyB. FEBS Letters, 591(9), 1258–1265. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.12642

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