4.4 Article

Residues at a Single Site Differentiate Animal Cryptochromes from Cyclobutane Pyrimidine Dimer Photolyases by Affecting the Proteins' Preferences for Reduced FAD

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 18, Issue 12, Pages 1129-1137

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201700145

Keywords

cryptochromes; flavin; photochemistry; photolyases

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30900243, 31570010]
  2. Innovation Team of Scientific Research Platform in Anhui Universities
  3. Anhui Provincial Key Laboratory of the Conservation and Exploitation of Biological Resources
  4. Support Program of the Youth Elite in Universities of Anhui Province
  5. Natural Science Research Project of Universities of Anhui Province [KJ2016A731]

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Cryptochromes (CRYs) and photolyases belong to the cryptochrome/photolyase family (CPF). Reduced FAD is essential for photolyases to photorepair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) or 6-4 photoproducts in DNA. In Drosophila CRY (dCRY, a typeI animal CRY), FAD is converted to the anionic radical but not to the reduced state upon illumination, which might induce a conformational change in the protein to relay the light signal downstream. To explore the foundation of these differences, multiple sequence alignment of 650 CPF protein sequences was performed. We identified a site facing FAD (Ala377 in Escherichia coli CPD photolyase and Val415 in dCRY), hereafter referred to as site377, that was distinctly conserved across these sequences: CPD photolyases often had Ala, Ser, or Asn at this site, whereas animal CRYs had Ile, Leu, or Val. The binding affinity for reduced FAD, but not the photorepair activity of E.coli photolyase, was dramatically impaired when replacing Ala377 with any of the three CRY residues. Conversely, in V415S and V415N mutants of dCRY, FAD was photoreduced to its fully reduced state after prolonged illumination, and light-dependent conformational changes of these mutants were severely inhibited. We speculate that the residues at site377 play a key role in the different preferences of CPF proteins for reduced FAD, which differentiate animal CRYs from CPD photolyases.

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