A Hydrogen Bond Between Linear Tetrapyrrole and Conserved Aspartate Causes the Far-Red Shifted Absorption of Phytochrome Photoreceptors

12 May 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Photoswitching of phytochrome photoreceptors between red-absorbing (Pr) and far-red absorbing (Pfr) states triggers light adaptation of plants, bacteria and other organisms. Using quantum chemistry, we elucidate the color-tuning mechanism of phytochromes and identify the origin of the Pfr-state red-shifted spectrum. Spectral variations are explained by resonance interactions of the protonated linear tetrapyrrole chromophore. In particular, hydrogen bonding of pyrrole ring D with the strictly conserved aspartate shifts the positive charge towards ring D thereby inducing the red spectral shift. Our MD simulations demonstrate that formation of the ring D–aspartate hydrogen bond depends on interactions between the chromophore binding domain (CBD) and phytochrome specific domain (PHY). Our study guides rational engineering of fluorescent phytochromes with a far-red shifted spectrum.

Keywords

phytochrome
charge transfer state
electron transfer
proton transfer
electron transfer coupled to proton transfer
red shift
Pfr-state spectrum
Pfr state
Asp207
D207
aspartate
tetrapyrrole
biliverdin

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
SI phytochrome red shift Egle Maximowitsch
Description
Actions

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