“…As a consequence, chromophore has to be added exogenously, or additional genes for endogenous production of PCB have to be introduced to target tissues as well (Müller et al, 2013c). Despite this limitation, At Phy: At PIF-based systems have been successfully used for regulating by light gene expression of eukaryotic transgenes (Shimizu-Sato et al, 2002; Müller et al, 2013b), protein splicing (Tyszkiewicz and Muir, 2008), GTPase signaling (Levskaya et al, 2009), MAP kinase signaling (Toettcher et al, 2013), nuclear transport (Beyer et al, 2015a), as well as sequestration to subcellular compartments (Yang et al, 2013). Similar to the cryptochrome case above, N-terminal fragments of At PhyA/B (either residues 1–650 or 1–910) and At PIF3/6 (residues 1–100) suffice to elicit red-light-activated, far-red-light-reversible heteroassociation (Levskaya et al, 2009; Müller et al, 2013a,b), with the caveat that a recent study implies that in a yeast transcriptional assay full-length PIF3 supports a higher dynamic range of light activation than the N-terminally truncated version (Pathak et al, 2014).…”