Organisms adapt their physiologies in response to the quality and quantity of environmental light. Members of a recently identified photoreceptor protein family, BLUF domain proteins, use a flavin chromophore to sense blue light. Herein, we report that PapB, which contains a BLUF domain, controls the biofilm formation of the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. Purified PapB undergoes a typical BLUF-type photocycle, and light-excited PapB enhances the phosphodiesterase activity of the EAL domain protein, PapA, which degrades the second messenger, cyclic dimeric GMP (c-di-GMP). PapB directly interacts with PapA in vitro in a light-independent manner and induces a conformational change in the preformed PapA-PapB complex. A PapA-PapB docking simulation, as well as a site-directed mutagenesis study, identified amino acids partially responsible for the interaction between the PapA EAL domain and the two C-terminal α-helices of the PapB BLUF domain. Thus, the conformational change, which involves the C-terminal α-helices, transfers the flavin-sensed blue light signal to PapA. Deletion of papB in R. palustris enhances biofilm formation under high-intensity blue light conditions, indicating that PapB functions as a blue light sensor, which negatively regulates biofilm formation. These results demonstrate that R. palustris can control biofilm formation via a blue light-dependent modulation of its c-di-GMP level by the BLUF domain protein, PapB.
PixD is a blue light-using flavin (BLUF) photoreceptor that controls phototaxis in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. PixD interacts with the response regulator-like protein PixE in a light-dependent manner, and this interaction is critical for light signal transduction in vivo. However, the structure of the PixD-PixE complex has not been determined. To improve our understanding of how PixD transmits its captured light signal to PixE, we used blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to characterize the molecular mass of a recombinant PixD-PixE complex purified from Escherichia coli and found it to be 342 kDa, suggesting that the complex contains 10 PixD and 4 PixE monomers. The stoichiometry of the complex was confirmed by Western blotting. Specifically, three intermediate states, PixD(10)-PixE(1), PixD(10)-PixE(2), and PixD(10)-PixE(3), were detected. The apparent dissociation constant for PixE and PixD is ~5 μM. A docking simulation was performed using a modeled PixE structure and the PixD(10) crystal structure. The docking simulation showed how the molecules in the PixD(10)-PixE(4) structure interact. To verify the accuracy of the docked model, a site-directed mutagenesis study was performed in which Arg80 of PixE, which appears to be capable of interacting electrostatically with Asp135 of PixD in the predicted structure, was shown to be critical for complex formation as mutation of PixE Arg80 to Asp or Ala prevented PixD-PixE complex formation. This study provides a structural basis for future investigations of the light signal transduction mechanism involving PixD and PixE.
We report the draft genome sequence of the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum. The photosynthesis gene cluster comprises two segments—a unique feature among photosynthesis gene clusters of purple bacteria. The genome information will be useful for further analysis of bacterial photosynthesis.
We developed a novel technique for manipulating the activity of transcription factors with blue light (termed "PICCORO") using the bacterial BLUF-type photoreceptor protein PixD. The chimeric dominant-negative T-box transcription factor No Tail formed heterologous complexes with a PixD decamer in a light-dependent manner, and these complexes affected transcription repressor activity. When applied to zebrafish embryos, PICCORO permitted regulation of the activity of the mutant No Tail in response to 472-nm light provided by a light-emitting diode.
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.
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