BMB Reports
- Volume 32 Issue 3
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- Pages.215-225
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- 1999
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- 1976-670X(eISSN)
Inter-Domain Signal Transmission within the Phytochromes
- Song, Pill-Soon (Kumho Life & Environmental Science Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska)
- Received : 1999.04.21
- Published : 1999.05.31
Abstract
Phytochromes (with gene family members phyA, B, C, D, and E) are a wavelength-dependent light sensor or switch for gene regulation that underscore a number of photo responsive developmental and morphogenic processes in plants. Recently, phytochrome-like pigment proteins have also been discovered in prokaryotes, possibly functioning as an auto-phosphorylating/phosphate-relaying two-component signaling system (Yeh et al., 1997). Phytochromes are photochromically convertible between the light sensing Pr and regulatory active Pfr forms. Red light converts Pr to Pfr, the latter having a "switch-on" conformation. The Pfr form triggers signal transduction pathways to the downstream responses including the expression of photosynthetic and other growth-regulating genes. The components involved in and the molecular mechanisms of the light signal transduction pathways are largely unknown, although G-proteins, protein kinases, and secondary messengers such as