Abstract

In plants and bacteria, phytochromes serve as light-inducible, red-/far-red light sensitive photoreceptors that control a wide range of photomorphogenetic processes. Phytochromes comprise a protein moiety and a covalently bound bilin chromophore. Bilins are open-chain tetrapyrrole compounds that derive biosynthetically from ubiquitous porphyrins. The investigations of phytochromes reveal that precise interactions between the protein moiety and its bilin chromophore are essential for the proper functioning of this photoreceptor; accordingly, synthetic manipulation of the parts is an important method for studying the whole. Although variations in the protein structure are readily accomplished by routine mutagenesis protocols, the generation of structurally modified bilins is a laborious, multistep process. Recent improvement in the synthesis of open-chain tetrapyrroles now permits the generation of novel, structurally modified (and even selectively isotope-labeled) chromophores. Furthermore, by using the capability of recombinant apo-phytochrome to bind the chromophore autocatalytically, researchers can now generate novel chromoproteins with modified functions. In the protein-bound state, the phytochrome chromophore is photoisomerized at one double bond, in the bridge between the last two of the four pyrrole rings (the C and D rings), generating the thermally stable, physiologically active P(fr) form. This conversion--photoisomerization from the form absorbing red light (P(r)) to the form absorbing far-red light (P(fr))--covers 12 orders of magnitude, from subpicoseconds to seconds. Such spectroscopic and kinetic studies yield a wealth of time-resolved spectral data, even more so, if proteins with changed sequence or chromophore structure are utilized. In particular, bilins with a changed substitution pattern at the photoisomerizing ring D have shed light on the chromophore-protein interactions during the photoisomerization. The mechanisms generating and stabilizing the light-induced P(fr) form of phytochromes are now seen in greater detail. On the other hand, the use of bilins with selective incorporation of stable isotopes identify light-induced conformational motions when studied by vibrational (FTIR and Raman) and NMR spectroscopy. In this Account, we present spectroscopic investigations that provide structural details in these biological photoreceptors with great precision and document the dynamics elicited by light excitation. This approach yields important information that complements the data deduced from crystal structure.

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