|
Resolution: standard / high Figure 2.
Domain structures of phytochromes. (a) The modular nature of phytochromes. Phytochromes consist of two functionally separable
regions: an amino-terminal photosensing domain and a carboxy-terminal domain that
is involved in dimerization of phytochrome polypeptide chains and in generating the
output signal. (b) Conserved phytochrome domains: NTE, plant-specific amino-terminal extension; PLD,
PAS-like domain; GAF, a domain distantly related to PAS and found in phytochromes
and cGMP-specific phosphodiesterases; PHY, a domain distantly related to PAS and specific
to phytochromes; HKD, histidine kinase domain containing a phosphoacceptor His residue
and motifs characteristic of functional histidine kinases; HKRD, histidine kinase
related domain lacking a phosphoacceptor His residue and motifs characteristic of
histidine kinases; HisKA, histidine kinase A domain-related; HisK-ATPase, histidine
kinase ATPase superfamily domain. The response regulator (RR)-like domain shown bracketed
in Cph and Bph is found in a minority of these proteins but is common in Fph proteins.
(c) The non-photoreversible chromophore-binding fragment of Bph that was used for determination
of the three-dimensional structures published in [25,29,30]. Its structure determines the absorption spectrum of the Pr form. For comparison,
the photoreversible fragment containing the PHY domain is also diagrammed. Its structure
will provide information about the nature of the conformational change between Pr
and Pfr.
Sharrock Genome Biology 2008 9:230 doi:10.1186/gb-2008-9-8-230 |