Optobiochemical control of protein activities allows the investigation of protein functions in living cells with high spatiotemporal resolution. Over the last two decades, numerous natural photosensory domains have been characterized and synthetic domains engineered and assembled into photoregulatory systems to control protein function with light. Here, we review the field of optobiochemistry, categorizing photosensory domains by chromophore, describing photoregulatory systems by mechanism of action, and discussing protein classes frequently investigated using optical methods. We also present examples of how spatial or temporal control of proteins in living cells has provided new insights not possible with traditional biochemical or cell biological techniques.
CITATION STYLE
Seong, J., & Lin, M. Z. (2021, June 20). Optobiochemistry: Genetically Encoded Control of Protein Activity by Light. Annual Review of Biochemistry. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biochem-072420-112431
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