4.7 Article

Time-Resolved X-Ray Solution Scattering Reveals the Structural Photoactivation of a Light-Oxygen-Voltage Photoreceptor

Journal

STRUCTURE
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 933-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2017.04.006

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education
  2. European Research Council
  3. Foundation of Strategic Research, Sweden
  4. Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation
  5. NIGMS/NIH [R24GM111072]
  6. NIH/NIDDK

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Light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) receptors are sensory proteins controlling a wide range of organismal adaptations in multiple kingdoms of life. Because of their modular nature, LOV domains are also attractive for use as optogenetic actuators. A flavin chromophore absorbs blue light, forms a bond with a proximal cysteine residue, and induces changes in the surroundings. There is a gap of knowledge on how this initial signal is relayed further through the sensor to the effector module. To characterize these conformational changes, we apply time-resolved X-ray scattering to the homodimeric LOV domain from Bacillus subtilis YtvA. We observe a global structural change in the LOV dimer synchronous with the formation of the chromophore photoproduct state. Using molecular modeling, this change is identified as splaying apart and relative rotation of the two monomers, which leads to an increased separation at the anchoring site of the effector modules.

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