Phytochrome

Phytochrome is a photoreceptor, a pigment that plants use to detect light. It is sensitive to light in the red and far-red region of the visible spectrum. It has been found in all higher plants, most other plants and many bacteria. Many flowering plants use it to regulate the time of flowering based on the length of day and night (photoperiodism) and to set circadian rhythms. It also regulates other responses including the germination of seeds, elongation of seedlings, the size, shape and number of leaves, the synthesis of chlorophyll, and the straightening of the epicotyl or hypocotyl hook of dicot seedlings.

Other plant photoreceptors include cryptochromes and phototropins, which are sensitive to light in the blue and ultra-violet regions of the spectrum.

Contents

Isoforms

There are two isoforms of phytochrome - Pr and Pfr. The Pr isoform absorbs red light (at 660nm) while the Pfr isoform absorbs far-red light (at 730nm). Absorption of light causes phytochrome to inter-convert. Hence, red light makes Pfr, far-red light makes Pr.

Phytochrome is made by the plant in the Pr form. Since daylight contains a lot of red light, during the day phytochrome is mostly converted to the Pfr form. At night, phytochrome will slowly convert back to the Pr form. Treatment with far-red light will also convert Pfr back to Pr. Since plants use red light for photosynthesis, and reflect and transmit far-red light, the shade of other plants also can make Pfr into Pr, triggering a response called shade avoidance.

In most plants, a suitable concentration of Pfr stimulates or inhibits physiological processes, such as those mentioned in the above examples. Thus Pfr is considered the active form of the pigment.

Biochemistry

Chemically, phytochrome consists of a chromophore consisting of a single molecule with an open chain of four pyrrole rings, bonded to a protein. It is the chromophore that absorbs light, and as a result changes conformation, thereby also affecting the conformation of the attached protein, changing it from one isoform to the other.

The phytochrome chromophore is usually called phytochromobilin, and is closely related to phycocyanobilin (the chromophore of the phycobilin pigment used by cyanobacteria and red algae to capture light for photosynthesis) and to the bile pigment bilirubin (whose structure is also affected by light exposure, a fact exploited in the phototherapy of jaundiced newborns).

The Pfr isoform passes on a signal to other biological systems in the cell, such as the mechanisms responsible for gene expression. Although this mechanism is almost certainly a biochemical process, it is still the subject of much debate. It has been proposed that phytochrome, in the Pfr form, may act as a kinase, and that it interacts directly with transcription factors.

Discovery

The phytochrome pigment was discovered by Sterling Hendricks and Harry Borthwick at the USDA-ARS in Beltsville, MD, during a period from the late 1940s to the early 1960s. Using a spectrograph built from borrowed and war-surplus parts, they discovered that red light was very effective for promoting germination or triggering flowering responses. The red light responses were reversible by far-red light, indicating the presence of a photoreversible pigment.

The phytochrome pigment was identified using a spectrophotometer in 1959 by biophysicist Warren Butler and biochemist Harold Siegelman. Butler was also responsible for the name, phytochrome, originally suggested as a joke.

In 1983 the laboratories of Peter Quail and Clark Lagarias reported the chemical purification of the phytochrome molecule, and in 1987 the first phytochrome genetic sequence was published by Howard Hershey and Peter Quail. By 1989, it had been shown as a result of genetic sequencing and monoclonal antibody experiments that more than one type of phytochrome existed; for example the pea plant was shown to have at least two phytochromes. It is now known by genome sequencing that Arabidopsis has exactly five. However, although these phytochromes have different protein components, they all share the same chromophore.

Before the existence of phytochrome was proven, skeptics called it “A pigment of the imagination.”

Genetic engineering

Scientists have speculated that if the structure of phytochrome can be changed through genetic engineering to absorb far-red light, shade avoidance can be circumvented. As a result, plants would expend less energy on growing as tall as possible and have more resources for growing seeds and expanding their root systems. This would have many practical benefits: for example, grass blades that would grow more slowly than regular grass would not require mowing as frequently.

References

nl:Phytochroom fr:Phytochrome

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