4.2 Article

Biochemical and functional characterization of BLUF-type flavin-binding proteins of two species of cyanobacteria

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 137, Issue 6, Pages 741-750

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jb/mvi089

Keywords

blue light sensor; BLUF; FAD; photoreceptor; phototaxis; thermophilic cyanobacterium

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BLUF (a sensor of Blue-Light Using FAD) is a novel putative photoreceptor domain that is found in many bacteria and some eukaryotic algae. As found on genome analysis, certain cyanobacteria have BLUF proteins with a short C-terminal extension. As typical examples, T110078 from thermophilic Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 and Slr1694 from mesophilic Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were comparatively studied. FAD of both proteins was hardly reduced by exogenous reductants or mediators except methylviologen but showed a typical spectral shift to a longer wavelength upon excitation with blue light. In particular, freshly prepared T110078 protein showed slow but reversible aggregation, indicative of light-induced conformational changes in the protein structure. T110078 is far more stable as to heat treatment than Slr1694, as judged from flavin fluorescence. The slr1694-disruptant showed phototactic motility away from the light source (negative phototaxis), while the wild type Synechocystis showed positive phototaxis toward the source. Yeast two-hybrid screening with slr1694 showed self-interaction of Slr1694 (PixD) with itself and interaction with a novel PatA-like response regulator, Slr1693 (PixE). These results were discussed in relation to the signaling mechanism of the short BLUF proteins in the regulation of cyanobacterial phototaxis.

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