4.4 Article

Role of phe1010 in light-induced structural changes of the neol-LOV2 domain of Adiantum

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 922-928

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi701851v

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Phototropin (phot) is a blue-light sensor protein that elicits several photo responses in plants. Phototropin has two flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-binding domains, LOV1 and LOV2, in its N-terminal half. The C-terminal half is a blue-light-regulated Ser/Thr kinase. Various functional studies have reported that only LOV2 is responsible for the kinase activity, whereas the X-ray crystallographic structures of the LOV1 and LOV2 domains are almost identical. How does such a functional difference emerge? Our previous FTIR study of the LOV domains of Adiantum neochromel (neol) showed that light-induced protein structural changes are small and temperature independent for neol-LOV1, whereas the structural changes are large and highly temperature dependent for neol-LOV2, which involve loops, (x-helices, and P-sheets. These observations successfully explained the different functions in terms of protein structural changes. They also suggested the presence of some crucial amino acids responsible for greater protein structural changes in the LOV2 domain. Here, we focused on phenylalanine-1010 (Phe1010) in neol-LOV2, where FMN is sandwiched between Phe1010 and the reactive cysteine. Phenylalanine at this position is conserved for LOV2 domains, while the corresponding amino acid is leucine for LOV1 domains in almost all plant phototropins. We observed that unlike wild-type LOV2, the FTIR spectra of F1010L LOV2 exhibited no temperature dependence in the (x-helical and P-sheet regions and that spectral changes in amide-I of these regions were significantly reduced, which was similar to LOV L Thus, the replacement of phenylalanine with leucine converts neol-LOV2 into neo1-LOV1 in terms of protein structural changes that must be related to the different functions. We will discuss the roles of phenylalanine and leucine in the LOV2 and LOV1 domains, respectively.

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