bilin ͉ biliprotein ͉ photochromic ͉ histidine kinase
The P r 3 P fr phototransformation of the bacteriophytochrome Agp1 from Agrobacterium tumefaciens and the structures of the biliverdin chromophore in the parent states and the cryogenically trapped intermediate Meta-R C were investigated with resonance Raman spectroscopy and flash photolysis. Strong similarities with the resonance Raman spectra of plant phytochrome A indicate that in Agp1 the methine bridge isomerization state of the chromophore is ZZZasa in P r and ZZEssa in P fr , with all pyrrole nitrogens being protonated. Photoexcitation of P r is followed by (at least) three thermal relaxation components in the formation of P fr with time constants of 230 s and 3.1 and 260 ms. H 2 O/D 2 O exchange reveals kinetic isotope effects of 1.9, 2.6, and 1.3 for the respective transitions that are accompanied by changes of the amplitudes. The second and the third relaxation correspond to the formation and decay of Meta-R C , respectively. Resonance Raman measurements of Meta-R C indicate that the chromophore adopts a deprotonated ZZE configuration. Measurements with a pH indicator dye show that formation and decay of Meta-R C are associated with proton release and uptake, respectively. The stoichiometry of the proton release corresponds to one proton per photoconverted molecule. The coupling of transient chromophore deprotonation and proton release, which is likely to be an essential element in the P r 3 P fr photoconversion mechanism of phytochromes in general, may play a crucial role for the structural changes in the final step of the P fr formation that switch between the active and the inactive state of the photoreceptor.Phytochromes are photoreceptors that utilize light as a source of information for controlling numerous biological processes (1, 2). The chromophore, a methine-bridged tetrapyrrole ( Fig. 1), acts as a photoswitch between two stable, spectrally distinct forms, denoted as P r and P fr according to the red and far-red absorption maxima, respectively. The P r /P fr interconversion is initiated by the rapid Z/E photoisomerization of the C-D methine bridge (3), followed by chromophore relaxations that are coupled to structural changes of the apoprotein (4). These structural changes are the trigger for signal transduction. Resonance Raman (RR) 2 and IR spectroscopy have provided valuable insight into light-induced chromophore and protein structural changes (e.g. see Refs. 5-10), but molecular and mechanistic details are not yet known and no crystal structure of a phytochrome has been reported so far.While phytochromes were originally thought to be restricted to plants, the discovery of these chromoproteins in cyanobacteria (11) and other bacteria points to the prokaryotic origin of this family of photoreceptors. In contrast to plant phytochromes, typical bacterial phytochromes are light-regulated histidine kinases. Despite the quite different regulatory functions (12, 13), plant and bacterial phytochromes exhibit structural and mechanistic similarities. The phytochromobilin chromophore of plant phytoc...
The mutants H250A and D197A of Agp1 phytochrome from Agrobacterium tumefaciens were prepared and investigated by different spectroscopic and biochemical methods. Asp-197 and His-250 are highly conserved amino acids and are part of the hydrogen-bonding network that involves the chromophore. Both substitutions cause a destabilization of the protonated chromophore in the Pr state as revealed by resonance Raman and UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. Titration experiments demonstrate a lowering of the pK a from 11.1 (wild type) to 8.8 in H250A and 7.2 in D197A. Photoconversion of the mutants does not lead to the Pfr state. H250A is arrested in a meta-Rc-like state in which the chromophore is deprotonated. For H250A and the wild-type protein, deprotonation of the chromophore in meta-Rc is coupled to the release of a proton to the external medium, whereas the subsequent proton re-uptake, linked to the formation of the Pfr state in the wild-type protein, is not observed for H250A. No transient proton exchange with the external medium occurs in D197A, suggesting that Asp-197 may be the proton release group. Both mutants do not undergo the photoinduced protein structural changes that in the wild-type protein are detectable by size exclusion chromatography. These conformational changes are, therefore, attributed to the meta-Rc 3 Pfr transition and most likely coupled to the transient proton re-uptake. The present results demonstrate that Asp-197 and His-250 are essential for stabilizing the protonated chromophore structure in the parent Pr state, which is required for the primary photochemical process, and for the complete photo-induced conversion to the Pfr state.
Phytochromes are bimodal photoswitches composed of a photosensor and an output module. Photoactivation of the sensor is initiated by a double bond isomerization of the tetrapyrrole chromophore and eventually leads to protein conformational changes. Recently determined structural models of phytochromes identify differences between the inactive and the signalling state but do not reveal the mechanism of photosensor activation or deactivation. Here, we report a vibrational spectroscopic study on bathy phytochromes that demonstrates that the formation of the photoactivated state and thus (de)activation of the output module is based on proton translocations in the chromophore pocket coupling chromophore and protein structural changes. These proton transfer steps, involving the tetrapyrrole and a nearby histidine, also enable thermal back-isomerization of the chromophore via keto-enol tautomerization to afford the initial dark state. Thus, the same proton re-arrangements inducing the (de)activation of the output module simultaneously initiate the reversal of this process, corresponding to a negative feedback mechanism.
Phytochromes are widely distributed biliprotein photoreceptors. Typically, the chromophore becomes covalently linked to the protein during an autocatalytic lyase reaction. Plant and cyanobacterial phytochromes incorporate bilins with a ring A ethylidene side chain, whereas other bacterial phytochromes utilize biliverdin as chromophore, which has a vinyl ring A side chain. For Agrobacterium phytochrome Agp1, site-directed mutagenesis provided evidence that biliverdin is bound to cysteine 20. This cysteine is highly conserved within bacterial homologues, but its role as attachment site has as yet not been proven. We therefore performed mass spectrometry studies on proteolytic holopeptide fragments. For that purpose, an Agp1 expression vector was re-engineered to produce a protein with an N-terminal affinity tag. Following proteolysis, the chromophore co-purified with a ca. 5 kDa fragment during affinity chromatography, showing that the attachment site is located close to the N-terminus. Mass spectrometry analyses performed with the purified chromopeptide confirmed the role of the cysteine 20 as biliverdin attachment site. We also analyzed the role of the highly conserved histidine 250 by site-directed mutagenesis. The homologous amino acid plays an important but yet undefined role in plant phytochromes and has been proposed as chromophore attachment site of Deinococcus phytochrome. We found that in Agp1, this amino acid is dispensable for covalent attachment, but required for tight chromophore-protein interaction.
Background:The Pr and Pfr parent states of prototypical and bathy bacteriophytochromes exhibit different thermal stabilities. Results: Unlike bathy phytochromes, the biliverdin cofactor of prototypical phytochromes displays distinct conformational heterogeneity in Pfr. Conclusion: This heterogeneity enables thermal Pfr to Pr conversion in prototypical phytochromes. Significance: Understanding thermal deactivation of the signaling Pfr state is essential for elucidating the molecular function of phytochromes.
Phytochromes are modular photoreceptors of plants, bacteria and fungi that use light as a source of information to regulate fundamental physiological processes. Interconversion between the active and inactive states is accomplished by a photoinduced reaction sequence which couples the sensor with the output module. However, the underlying molecular mechanism is yet not fully understood due to the lack of structural data of functionally relevant intermediate states. Here we report the crystal structure of a Meta-F intermediate state of an Agp2 variant from Agrobacterium fabrum. This intermediate, the identity of which was verified by resonance Raman spectroscopy, was formed by irradiation of the parent Pfr state and displays significant reorientations of almost all amino acids surrounding the chromophore. Structural comparisons allow identifying structural motifs that might serve as conformational switch for initiating the functional secondary structure change that is linked to the (de-)activation of these photoreceptors.
The widely distributed phytochrome photoreceptors carry a bilin chromophore, which is covalently attached to the protein during a lyase reaction. In plant phytochromes, the natural chromophore is coupled by a thioether bond between its ring A ethylidene side chain and a conserved cysteine residue within the so-called GAF domain of the protein. Many bacterial phytochromes carry biliverdin as natural chromophore, which is coupled in a different manner to the protein. In phytochrome Agp1 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, biliverdin is covalently attached to a cysteine residue close to the N terminus (position 20). By testing different natural and synthetic biliverdin derivatives, it was found that the ring A vinyl side chain is used for chromophore attachment. Only those bilins that have ring A vinyl side chain were covalently attached, whereas bilins with an ethylidene or ethyl side chain were bound in a noncovalent manner. Phycocyanobilin, which belongs to the latter group, was however covalently attached to a mutant in which a cysteine was introduced into the GAF domain of Agp1 (position 249). It is proposed that the regions around positions 20 and 249 are in close contact and contribute both to the chromophore pocket. In competition experiments it was found that phycocyanobilin and biliverdin bind with similar strength to the wild type protein. However, in the V249C mutant, phycocyanobilin bound much more strongly than biliverdin. This finding could explain why during phytochrome evolution in cyanobacteria, the chromophore-binding site swapped from the N terminus into the GAF domain.Phytochromes are biliprotein photoreceptors that were discovered in plants (1) but were recently also found in bacteria (2-4), fungi (5), and slime molds (6). The photocycle of phytochromes has two long-lived forms, the red-absorbing form (Pr), 1
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