Phytochrome, the Visual Pigment of Plants

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Abstract

Plants require light for photosynthesis. In order to adapt to the light conditions in their particular habitat, they have developed various photoreceptor systems. Of these, phytochrome allows even two‐color vision in the red/far‐red region. The photoreceptor phytochrome is of interest not only to botanists, but also to natural product chemists, photochemists, biochemists, photobiologists, and recently molecular biologists. Despite numerous studies, there are still considerable gaps in our knowledge of this photoreceptor. This article first describes the basic structural studies of the tetrapyrrole chromophore and its photochemical cis–trans isomerization, which is the source of the chromoprotein's photochromism. In the section on the protein moiety, beside other topics, the domain structure of phytochrome and the conformational changes during phototransformation are discussed. Finally, the known phytochrome genes are used to derive phylogenetic relationships, and possible structure–function relationships are discussed. Copyright © 1991 by VCH Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Germany

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APA

Rüdiger, W., & Thümmler, F. (1991). Phytochrome, the Visual Pigment of Plants. Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.199112161

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