info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The β-scaffold of the LOV domain of the brucella light-activated histidine kinase is a key element for signal transduction
Fecha
2012-06Registro en:
Rinaldi, Jimena Julieta; Gallo, Mariana; Klinke, Sebastian; Paris, Gastón; Bonomi, Hernán Ruy; et al.; The β-scaffold of the LOV domain of the brucella light-activated histidine kinase is a key element for signal transduction; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal Of Molecular Biology; 420; 1-2; 6-2012; 112-127
0022-2836
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Rinaldi, Jimena Julieta
Gallo, Mariana
Klinke, Sebastian
Paris, Gastón
Bonomi, Hernán Ruy
Bogomolni, Roberto A.
Cicero, Daniel Oscar
Goldbaum, Fernando Alberto
Resumen
Light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domains are blue-light-activated signaling modules present in a wide range of sensory proteins. Among them, the histidine kinases are the largest group in prokaryotes (LOV-HK). Light modulates the virulence of the pathogenic bacteria Brucella abortus through LOV-HK. One of the striking characteristic of Brucella LOV-HK is the fact that the protein remains activated upon light sensing, without recovering the basal state in the darkness. In contrast, the light state of the isolated LOV domain slowly returns to the dark state. To gain insight into the light activation mechanism, we have characterized by X-ray crystallography and solution NMR spectroscopy the structure of the LOV domain of LOV-HK in the dark state and explored its light-induced conformational changes. The LOV domain adopts the α/β PAS (PER-ARNT-SIM) domain fold and binds the FMN cofactor within a conserved pocket. The domain dimerizes through the hydrophobic β-scaffold in an antiparallel way. Our results point to the β-scaffold as a key element in the light activation, validating a conserved structural basis for light-to-signal propagation in LOV proteins.