4.4 Article

Different Role of the Jα Helix in the Light-Induced Activation of the LOV2 Domains in Various Phototropins

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 48, Issue 32, Pages 7621-7628

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi9009192

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Phototropins (phot) are blue light receptors in plants which are involved in phototropism, stomatal opening, and chloroplast movements. Phototropin has two LOV domains (LOV I and LOV2), and the LOV2 domain is responsible for activation of Ser/Thr kinase. There is an alpha-helix at the C-terminal side of the LOV2 domain, which is called the J alpha helix. The functional importance of the J alpha helix has been established for Arabidopsis phot1, where light-induced structural perturbation takes place in the J alpha helix during the photocycle of LOV2 domains. However, the present FTIR study reports a different role of the J alpha helix in light-induced signal transduction of LOV2 domains, Here we construct LOV2 domains with (LOW-J alpha) and without (LOV-core) the J alpha helix for Arabidopsis phot1 and phot2 and Adiantum neochrome I and compare their light-Induced difference FTIR spectra. Light-induced protein structural changes differ significantly between LOV-J alpha and LOV-core for Arabidopsis phot1 [Yamamoto, A., Iwata, T., Sato, Y., Matsuoka, D., Tokutomi, S., and Kandori, H. (2009) Biophys. J. 96, 2771-2778]. fit contrast, the difference spectra are identical between LOV-J alpha and LOV-core for Adiantum neochrome 1. In Arabidopsis phot2, the protein structural changes are intermediate between Arabidopsis phot I and Adiantum neochrome 1. These results suggest that the conformational changes of the J alpha helix and the interaction between the LOV-core and the J alpha helix are different among phototropins. The role of the J alpha helix for signal transduction in phototropins is discussed.

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