4.3 Article

Computational studies on photolyase (Phr) proteins of cyanobacteria

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 2, Pages 111-137

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjm-2021-0167

Keywords

cyanobacteria; cryptochrome; cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers; photolyases; photoreactivation; (6-4) photoproducts; ultraviolet radiation

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology, Government of India [DBT-JRF/13/AL/143/2158]
  2. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi [09/013 (0795) /2018-EMR-I]
  3. Science and Engineering Research Board, Department of Science and Technology, Government of India [ECR/2016/000578]

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Photolyases are enzymes that use light to repair UV-induced damage. By analyzing the amino acid sequences of cyanobacterial genomes, five classes of photolyases were identified. The distribution of these classes varied depending on the habitat of the organisms. Novel binding sites were also discovered, providing insights for the development of efficient photolyase-based formulations.
Photolyases (Phrs) are enzymes that utilize the blue/ultraviolet (UV-A) region of light for repairing UV-induced cyclopyramidine dimers. We studied Phr groups by bioinformatic analyses as well as active-site and structural modeling. Analysis of 238 amino acid sequences from 85 completely sequenced cyanobacterial genomes revealed five classes of Phrs, CPD Gr I, 6-4 Phrs/cryptochrome, Cry-DASH, Fe-S bacteria Phrs, and a group with fewer amino acids (276-385) in length. The distribution of Phr groups in cyanobacteria belonging to the order Synechococcales was found to be influenced by the habitats of the organisms. Class V Phrs are exclusively present in cyanobacteria. Unique motifs and binding sites were reported in groups II and III. The Fe-S protein binding site was only present in group V and the active site residues and putative CPD/6-4PP binding residues are charged amino acids present on the surface of the proteins. The majority of hydrophilic amino acid residues were present on the surface of the Phrs. Sequence analysis confirmed the diverse nature of Phrs, although sequence diversity did not affect the overall three-dimensional structure. Protein-ligand interaction analysis identified novel CPD/6-4PP binding sites on Phrs. This structural information of Phrs can be used for the preparation of efficient Phr-based formulations.

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