Cryptochromes and photolyases are blue-light photoreceptors and DNA-repair enzymes, respectively, with conserved domains and a common ancestry [1-3]. Photolyases use UV-A and blue light to repair lesions in DNA caused by UV radiation, photoreactivation, although cryptochromes have specialized roles ranging from the regulation of photomorphogenesis in plants, to clock function in animals [4-7]. A group of cryptochromes (cry-DASH) [8] from bacteria, plants, and animals has been shown to repair in vitro cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) in single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), but not in double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) [9].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cryptochrome photoreceptor mutant cry2I404F exhibits hyperactivity in the dark, hypersensitivity in different light conditions, and in contrast to the wild-type protein, its flavin chromophore is reducible even in the absence of light. Plant cryptochromes (cry) are blue-light photoreceptors involved in multiple signaling pathways and various photomorphogenic responses. One biologically hyperactive mutant of a plant cryptochrome that was previously characterized is Arabidopsis cry1L407F (Exner et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant cryptochromes (cry) act as UV-A/blue light receptors. The prototype, cry1, regulates several light responses during the life cycle, including de-etiolation, and is also involved in regulating flowering time. The cry1 photocycle is initiated by light absorption by its FAD chromophore, which is most likely fully oxidized (FAD) in the dark state and photoreduced to the neutral flavin semiquinone (FADH°) in its lit state.
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