Light-induced structural changes in a full-length cyanobacterial phytochrome probed by time-resolved X-ray scattering.
Derren J HeyesSamantha J O HardmanMartin N PedersenJoyce WoodhouseEugenio De La MoraMichael WulffMartin WeikMarco CammarataNigel S ScruttonGiorgio SchiròPublished in: Communications biology (2019)
Phytochromes are photoreceptor proteins that transmit a light signal from a photosensory region to an output domain. Photoconversion involves protein conformational changes whose nature is not fully understood. Here, we use time-resolved X-ray scattering and optical spectroscopy to study the kinetics of structural changes in a full-length cyanobacterial phytochrome and in a truncated form with no output domain. X-ray and spectroscopic signals on the µs/ms timescale are largely independent of the presence of the output domain. On longer time-scales, large differences between the full-length and truncated proteins indicate the timeframe during which the structural transition is transmitted from the photosensory region to the output domain and represent a large quaternary motion. The suggested independence of the photosensory-region dynamics on the µs/ms timescale defines a time window in which the photoreaction can be characterized (e.g. for optogenetic design) independently of the nature of the engineered output domain.