Peter L. Freddolino, Kevin H. Gardner, and Klaus Schulten.
Signaling mechanisms of LOV domains: new insights from molecular
dynamics studies.
Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences, 12:1158-1170, 2013.
(PMC: 3679247)
FRED2013
Phototropins are one of several classes of photoreceptors used by plants and algae to
respond to light. These proteins contain flavin-binding LOV (Light-Oxygen-Voltage)
domains that form covalent cysteineflavin adducts upon exposure to blue light, leading to
the enhancement of phototropin kinase activity. Several lines of evidence suggest that
adduct formation in the phototropin LOV2 domains leads to the dissociation of an alpha
helix (J) from these domains as part of the light-induced activation process.
However, crystal structures of LOV domains both in the presence and absence of the
J helix show very few differences between dark and illuminated states, and thus
the precise mechanism through which
adduct formation triggers helical dissociation remains poorly understood. Using Avena
sativa phototropin 1 LOV2 as a model system, we have studied the interactions of the LOV
domain core with the J helix
through a series of equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations. Here we show that
conformational transitions of a conserved glutamine residue in the flavin binding pocket
are coupled to altered dynamics of the J helix both through a shift in dynamics of
the main -sheet of the LOV domain core and through a secondary pathway
involving the N-terminal A’ helix.
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