Abstract
Blue light-using flavin (BLUF) proteins form a subfamily of blue light photoreceptors, are found in many bacteria and algae, and are further classified according to their structures. For one type of BLUF-containing protein, e.g. PixD, the central axes of its two C-terminal α-helices are perpendicular to the β-sheet of its N-terminal BLUF domain. For another type, e.g. PapB, the central axes of its two C-terminal α-helices are parallel to its BLUF domain β-sheet. However, the functional significance of the different orientations with respect to phototransduction is not clear. For the study reported herein, we constructed a chimeric protein, Pix0522, containing the core of the PixD BLUF domain and the C-terminal region of PapB, including the two α-helices, and characterized its biochemical and spectroscopic properties. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy detected similar light-induced conformational changes in the C-terminal α-helices of Pix0522 and PapB. Pix0522 interacts with and activates the PapB-interacting enzyme, PapA, demonstrating the functionality of Pix0522. These results provide direct evidence that the BLUF C-terminal α-helices function as an intermediary that accepts the flavin-sensed blue light signal and transmits it downstream during phototransduction. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Japanese Society of Plant Physiologists.
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Ren, S., Sawada, M., Hasegawa, K., Hayakawa, Y., Ohta, H., & Masuda, S. (2012). A PixD - PapB chimeric protein reveals the function of the BLUF domain C-terminal α-helices for light signal transduction. Plant and Cell Physiology, 53(9), 1638–1647. https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcs108
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