posted on 2020-12-23, 15:34authored byJonathan
A. Clinger, Eefei Chen, David S. Kliger, George N. Phillips
The
bilin-containing photoreceptor TePixJ, a member of the cyanobacteriochrome
(CBCR) family of phytochromes, switches between blue-light-absorbing
and green-light-absorbing states in order to drive phototaxis in Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Its photoswitching
process involves the formation of a thioether linkage between the
C10 carbon of phycoviolobilin and the sidechain of Cys494 during the
change in state from green-absorbing to blue-absorbing forms. Complex
changes in the binding pocket propagate the signal to other domains
for downstream signaling. Here, we report time-resolved circular dichroism
experiments in addition to pump–probe absorption measurements
for interpretation of the biophysical mechanism of the green-to-blue
photoconversion process of this receptor.