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Structure of the response regulator RPA3017 involved in red-light signaling in Rhodopseudomonas palustris.

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-02-08, 00:00 authored by X Yang, X Zeng, K Moffat
Two-component signal transduction is the major signaling mechanism that enables bacteria to survive and thrive in complex environmental conditions. The photosynthetic bacterium R. palustris employs two tandem bacteriophytochromes, RpBphP2 and RpBphP3, to perceive red-light signals that regulate the synthesis of light-harvesting complexes under low-light conditions. Both RpBphP2 and RpBphP3 are photosensory histidine kinases coupled to the same response regulator RPA3017. Together, they constitute a two-component system that converts a red-light signal into a biological signal. In this work, the crystal structure of RPA3017 in the unphosphorylated form at 1.9 Å resolution is presented. This structure reveals a tightly associated dimer arrangement that is conserved among phytochrome-related response regulators. The conserved active-site architecture provides structural insight into the phosphotransfer reaction between RpBphP2/RpBphP3 and RPA3017. Based on structural comparisons and homology modeling, how specific recognition between RpBphP2/RpBphP3 and RPA3017 is achieved at the molecular level is further explored.

Funding

R01EY024363/EY/NEI NIH HHS/United States

History

Publisher Statement

This is the copy of an article published in the Acta Crystallographica Section F: Structural Biology Communications © 2015 International Union of Crystallography. Publications.

Publisher

International Union of Crystallography

issn

2053-230X

Issue date

2015-10-01

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