4.7 Article

Cyanobacterial phytochrome-like PixJ1 holoprotein shows novel reversible photoconversion between blue- and green-absorbing forms

Journal

PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 12, Pages 1729-1737

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pch214

Keywords

cyanobacterium; motility; photoreceptor; phototaxis; phytochrome; signal transduction

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The gene, pixJ1 (formerly pisJ1), is predicted to encode a phytochrome-like photoreceptor that is essential for positive phototaxis in the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 [Yoshihara et al. (2000) Plant Cell Physiol. 41: 1299]. The PixJ1 protein was overexpressed as a fusion with a poly-histidine tag (His-PixJ1) and isolated from Synechocystis cells. A zinc-fluorescence assay suggested that a linear tetrapyrrole was covalently attached to the His-PixJ1 protein as a chromophore. His-PixJ1 showed novel photoreversible conversion between a blue light-absorbing form (P-b, lambda(Amax) = 425-435 nm) and a green light-absorbing form (P-g, lambda(Amax) = 535 nm). Dark incubation led P-g to revert to P-b, indicative of stability of the P-b form in darkness. Red or far-red light irradiation, which is effective for photochemical conversion of the known phytochromes, produced no change in the spectra of P-b and P-g forms. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that a Cys-His motif in the second GAF domain of PixJ1 is responsible for binding of the chromophore. Possible chromophore species are discussed with regard to the novel photoconversion spectrum.

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