首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Ferritin is an iron-containing protein which is a normal component of serum. The levels of ferritin are increased in the sera of some children with neuroblastoma, and this increase appears to be a potent indicator of prognosis. To determine whether synthesis of ferritin by the tumor cells contributes to these increased serum levels, we examined incorporation of radiolabeled leucine by CHP 126, a neuroblastoma derived cell line, into ferritin. Using sequential immunoprecipitation and gel electrophoresis of sonicates from cells maintained in medium containing iron in amounts standard for tissue culture, incorporation of label into ferritin was 0.04% of that into total protein synthesized over the same time period. Addition of up to 40 micrograms of iron as ferric ammonium citrate increased ferritin synthesis to a maximum of 0.16% without altering synthesis of total protein. The pattern of iron-induced enhancement in the neuroblastoma cells was similar to that which was seen using Chang liver cells, a cell line well known to be capable of ferritin synthesis. These results confirm that neuroblastoma cells can synthesize ferritin and that synthesis is regulated by exogenous iron.  相似文献   

2.
Li C  Hu X  Zhao G 《Biochimie》2009,91(2):230-239
It was established that ferritin from pea seed is composed of 26.5 and 28.0kDa subunits, but the relationship between the two subunits is unclear. The present study by both MALDI-TOF-MS and MS/MS indicated that the 28.0kDa subunit is distinct from the 26.5kDa subunit although they might share high homology in amino acid sequence, a result suggesting that pea seed ferritin is encoded by at least two genes. This result is not consistent with previous proposal that the 28.0kDa subunit is converted into the 26.5kDa subunit upon cleavage of its N-terminal sequence by free radical. Also, present results indicated that pea seed ferritin contains two different kinds of ferroxidase centers located in the 28.0 and 26.5kDa subunits, respectively. This is an exception among all known ferritins. Therefore, it is of special interest to know the role of the two subunits in iron oxidative deposition. Spectrophotometric titration and stopped flow results indicated that 48 ferrous ions can be bound and oxidized by oxygen at the ferroxidase sites, demonstrating that all of the ferroxidase sites are active and involved in fast Fe(II) oxidation. However, unlike H and L subunits in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF), both the 28.0 and 26.5 subunits lack cooperation in iron turnover into the inner cavity of pea seed ferritin.  相似文献   

3.
Ferritin is a large multisubunit protein that stores iron in plants, animals, and bacteria. In animals, the protein is mainly cytoplasmic and is highly conserved, while in plants ferritin is found in chloroplasts and other plastids. Ferritin is synthesized in plants as a larger precursor of the mature subunit. There is no sequence information for ferritin from plants, except an NH2-terminal peptide of 35 residues which shows little similarity to any known ferritin sequences or transit peptides (Laulhere, J. P., Laboure, A. M., and Briat, J. F. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 3629-3635). To understand the genetic origin and the location of ferritin synthesis in plant cells, as well as the structure of ferritin from plants, we have sequenced both CNBr peptides from pea seed ferritin and nucleotides of a soybean hypocotyl ferritin cDNA, identified using a frog ferritin cDNA as a probe. Comparison of pea and soybean sequences showed an identity of 89%. Alignment of the plant ferritin sequences with animal ferritins showed 55-65% sequence identity in the common regions. However, a peptide of 28 amino acids extended the NH2 terminus of the plant ferritins. Furthermore, the cDNA encoded additional amino acids which appear to be a transit peptide. None of the sequences in soybean ferritin were found in the tobacco chloroplast genome, suggesting, as does the transit peptide, a nuclear location of ferritin gene(s) in plants. Plant ferritin mRNA is 400-500 nucleotides longer than animal ferritin mRNAs, a difference accounted for in part by the extra peptides encoded. The size of soybean ferritin mRNA was constant in different tissues but expression varied in different tissues (leaf greater than hypocotyl). Thus, higher plants and animal ferritins display sequence homology and differential tissue expression. An ancient, common progenitor apparently gave rise to contemporary eukaryotic ferritins after specific modifications, e.g. transport to plasmids.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Iron increases ferritin synthesis, targeting plant DNA and animal mRNA. The ferritin promoter in plants has not been identified, in contrast to the ferritin promoter and mRNA iron-responsive element (IRE) in animals. The soybean leaf, a natural tissue for ferritin expression, and DNA, with promoter deletions and luciferase or glucuronidase reporters, delivered with particle bombardment, were used to show that an 86-base pair fragment (iron regulatory element (FRE)) controlled iron-mediated derepression of the ferritin gene. Mutagenesis with linkers of random sequence detected two subdomains separated by 21 base pairs. FRE has no detectable homology to the animal IRE or to known promoters in DNA and bound a trans-acting factor in leaf cell extracts. FRE/factor binding was abrogated by increased tissue iron, in analogy to mRNA (IRE)/iron regulatory protein in animals. Maximum ferritin derepression was obtained with 50 microm iron citrate (1:10) or 500 microm iron citrate (1:1) but Fe-EDTA was ineffective, although the leaf iron concentration was increased; manganese, zinc, and copper had no effect. The basis for different responses in ferritin expression to different iron complexes, as well as the significance of using DNA but not mRNA as an iron regulatory target in plants, remain unknown.  相似文献   

6.
Ferritins from maize, pea, and soya bean seeds were purified. They contain two polypeptides of 28 and 26.5 kDa. The molecular weight of native pea seed ferritin has been estimated to be 540,000. Pea and maize seed ferritins were compared by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography, amino acid composition, and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. They are very similar, although four isoforms of the 28-kDa polypeptide from the pea were observed in contrast to a unique polypeptide in maize. No isoforms of the 26.5-kDa polypeptide were detected. Rabbit antibodies were produced in response to pea seed ferritin. It was shown by Western blot analysis that ferritins of the three plants analyzed share immunological determinants. However, horse spleen ferritin was not recognized by the phytoferritin antibodies. Antibodies were also used to demonstrate that ferritins are not uniformly distributed in different pea organs from 30-day-old iron-unloaded plants. The protein was more abundant in flowers than in fruits and roots, and was not detected in leaves.  相似文献   

7.
豌豆铁蛋白的纯化及其抗血清的制备   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
干豌豆种子粗提物经MgCl2 盐析、AcA2 2 凝胶过滤和DEAE 纤维素阴离子交换柱层析等方法进行纯化 ,以邻菲咯啉显色法检测铁蛋白 ,最后获得纯的铁蛋白 .纯化的铁蛋白在PAGE上显示一条带 ,SDS PAGE显示该蛋白仅含 2 8kD一条亚基 .纯化的豌豆铁蛋白免疫兔 7周后 ,琼脂糖双扩散法检测抗血清效价达 1∶32 .用分级盐析法纯化抗血清 ,纯化后的抗体用琼脂糖双扩散法对大豆铁蛋白粗提物有免疫交叉反应  相似文献   

8.
Ferritin is a multimeric iron storage protein composed of 24 subunits. Ferritin purified from dried soybean seed resolves into two peptides of 26.5 and 28 kDa. To date, the 26.5-kDa subunit has been supposed to be generated from the 28-kDa subunit by cleavage of the N-terminal region. We performed amino acid sequence analysis of the 28-kDa subunit and found that it had a different sequence from the 26.5-kDa subunit, thus rendering it novel among known soybean ferritins. We cloned a cDNA encoding this novel subunit from 10-day-old seedlings, each of which contained developed bifoliates, an epicotyl and a terminal bud. The 26.5-kDa subunit was found to be identical to that identified previously lacking the C-terminal 16 residues that correspond to the E helix of mammalian ferritin. However, the corresponding region in the 28-kDa soybean ferritin subunit identified in this study was not susceptible to cleavage. We present evidence that the two different ferritin subunits in soybean dry seeds show differential sensitivity to protease digestions and that the novel, uncleaved 28-kDa ferritin subunit appears to stabilize the ferritin shell by co-existing with the cleaved 26.5-kDa subunit. These data demonstrate that soybean ferritin is composed of at least two different subunits, which have cooperative functional roles in soybean seeds.  相似文献   

9.
Homologs of the ferric uptake regulator Fur and the iron storage protein ferritin play a central role in maintaining iron homeostasis in bacteria. The gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori contains an iron-induced prokaryotic ferritin (Pfr) which has been shown to be involved in protection against metal toxicity and a Fur homolog which has not been functionally characterized in H. pylori. Analysis of an isogenic fur-negative mutant revealed that H. pylori Fur is required for metal-dependent regulation of ferritin. Iron starvation, as well as medium supplementation with nickel, zinc, copper, and manganese at nontoxic concentrations, repressed synthesis of ferritin in the wild-type strain but not in the H. pylori fur mutant. Fur-mediated regulation of ferritin synthesis occurs at the mRNA level. With respect to the regulation of ferritin expression, Fur behaves like a global metal-dependent repressor which is activated under iron-restricted conditions but also responds to different metals. Downregulation of ferritin expression by Fur might secure the availability of free iron in the cytoplasm, especially if iron is scarce or titrated out by other metals.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The synthesis of ferritin is regulated at the translation level in coordination with iron availability. Under conditions of low iron, translation of ferritin mRNA is repressed and the majority of ferritin mRNA is non-polysomal. Upon an increase in iron, translation of ferritin mRNA is derepressed resulting in as much as a 50-100-fold increase in the rate of ferritin synthesis. This regulation is mediated at least in part by a specific translational repressor which binds to a conserved sequence, the iron responsive element, located in the 5'-untranslated region of ferritin mRNA. In this communication we report the purification of such a repressor from rabbit liver. This repressor, which we call the "ferritin repressor protein," has an apparent molecular mass of 90 kDa when analyzed by gel filtration chromatography. It inhibits translation of ferritin mRNA in a highly specific fashion when added to a wheat germ lysate programmed with liver poly(A+) mRNA. In addition, it binds specifically to sequences contained within the first 92 nucleotides of ferritin mRNA, most likely the iron responsive element. Analysis of highly purified repressor by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that it is composed primarily of a single polypeptide of approximately 90 kDa. Elution of this 90-kDa polypeptide from a sodium dodecyl sulfate gel followed by renaturation and analysis for repressor activity shows that it both binds to the 5'-untranslated region of ferritin mRNA and represses its translation in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
The relation of the growth-stimulating capacity of transferrin to its iron-transporting function was investigated in mouse hybridoma PLV-01 cells cultivated in a chemically defined medium. The cells were precultivated in protein-free medium supplemented either with ferric citrate (cells with a high intracellular iron level) or with iron-saturated transferrin (cells with a low intracellular iron level). Iron uptake was monitored after the application of 59Fe-labeled ferric citrate or pig transferrin. Cultivation of the cells at the optimum growth-stimulating concentration (500 microM) of ferric citrate resulted in an intracellular iron level about 100-fold higher than that of cells cultivated at the optimum transferrin concentration (5 micrograms/ml). Replacement of pig transferrin with bovine transferrin resulted in similar intracellular iron levels, but the growth-stimulating effect of bovine transferrin was more than one order of magnitude lower. Cells with a high intracellular iron level grew equally well when cultivated with iron-saturated transferrin or with apotransferrin + deferoxamine (2 micrograms/ml). On the other hand, cells with a low intracellular iron level required iron-saturated transferrin for further growth and apotransferrin + deferoxamine was ineffective. The results suggest that transferrin can act as a cell growth factor only in the iron-saturated form. However, several findings of this work indicate that supplying cells with iron cannot be accepted as the full explanation of the transferrin growth-stimulating effect.  相似文献   

13.
A novel NADH-dependent, soluble flavoreductase of 60 kDa, active toward ferric chelates and quinones, has been purified from maize seedlings. Two closely related isoforms were separated. The two isoforms are similar in several biochemical features, with the exception of the apparent molecular mass of their subunits (29 and 31 kDa, respectively). They are homodimers in the native state, they bind FAD as the prosthetic group and show strong preference for NADH over NADPH as the electron donor. Ferric chelates (chiefly ferric citrate, Km 3-5 x 10(-5) M; kcat/Km 3.4-3.7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1), and some quinones (benzoquinone, coenzyme Q-0, and juglone) are used as electron acceptors. Enzymatic reduction of benzoquinone occurs with formation of radical semiquinones. Both soluble ferric chelate reductase isoforms are strongly inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoic acid (I50 5 nM) and by cibachron blue, the latter giving nonlinear inhibition. It is suggested that soluble ferric chelate reductase might be involved in the symplastic reduction of iron chelates which is required for the assembly of iron-containing macromolecules such as cytochromes and ferritin.  相似文献   

14.
Acquisition of iron from citrate by Pseudomonas aeruginosa   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Transport of [14C]citrate, ferric [14C]citrate and [55Fe]ferric citrate into Pseudomonas aeruginosa grown in synthetic media containing citrate, succinate, or succinate and citrate as carbon and energy sources was measured. Cells grown in citrate-containing medium transported radiolabelled citrate and iron, whereas the succinate-grown cells transported iron but not citrate. Binding studies revealed that isolated outer and inner membranes of citrate-grown cells contain a citrate receptor, absent from membranes of succinate-grown cells. [55Fe]Ferric citrate bound to the isolated outer membranes of each cell type. The failure of citrate to compete with this binding suggests the presence of a ferric citrate receptor on the outer membranes of each cell type. Citrate induced the synthesis of two outer-membrane proteins of 41 and 19 kDa. A third protein of 17 kDa was more dominant in citrate-grown cells than in succinate-grown cells.  相似文献   

15.
It has long been assumed that iron regulates the turnover of ferritin, but evidence for or against this idea has been lacking. This issue was addressed using rat hepatoma cells with characteristics of hepatocytes subjected to a continuous influx of iron. Iron-pretreated cells were pulsed with [(35)S]Met for 60 min or with (59)Fe overnight and harvested up to 30 h thereafter, during which they were/were not cultured with ferric ammonium citrate (FAC; 180 microm). Radioactivity in ferritin/ferritin subunits of cell heat supernatants was determined by autoradiography of rockets obtained by immunoelectrophoresis or after precipitation with ferritin antibody and SDS-PAGE. Both methods gave similar results. During the +FAC chase, the concentration of ferritin in the cells increased linearly with time. Without FAC, the half-life of (35)S-ferritin was 19-20 h; with FAC there was no turnover. Without FAC, the iron in ferritin had an apparent half-life of 20 h; in the presence of FAC there was no loss of (59)Fe. Without FAC, concentrations of ferritin iron and protein also decreased in parallel. We conclude that a continuous influx of excess iron can completely inhibit the degradation of ferritin protein and that the iron and protein portions of ferritin molecules may be coordinately degraded.  相似文献   

16.
Lapine articular chondrocytes in vitro were used to study the effects of Fe3+, Fe2+, ferritin and haemoglobin on cell proliferation, synthesis of proteoglycans and morphological structure. Fe3+ (10, 100 and 500 micrograms/ml) reduced the DNA content of cultures by approximately 35% as well as inhibiting proteoglycan synthesis. Chondrocytes showed positive cytoplasmic staining for both ferric and ferrous ions at the 500 micrograms/ml concentration. Fe2+ (100 micrograms/ml) also decreased DNA content and proteoglycan synthesis, although no iron uptake by the chondrocytes could be detected. Ferritin (1.0, 0.5 and 0.1 micrograms/ml) elicited a significant inhibition of proteoglycan synthesis without affecting cellular DNA synthesis. 1 and 5 micrograms/ml of haemoglobin each reduced the DNA content of cultures by 60%, whilst markedly inhibiting proteoglycan synthesis (75 and 99% respectively). None of the substances tested caused chondrocyte toxicity. The ability of Fe3+, Fe2+, ferritin and, in particular, haemoglobin to inhibit chondrocyte proteoglycan synthesis may represent a pathway whereby cartilage is susceptible to destruction in the haemophilic joint.  相似文献   

17.
The cellular uptake and storage of iron have to be tightly regulated in order to provide iron for essential cellular functions while preventing the iron-catalysed generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In contrast to cells in other organs, little is known about the regulation of iron metabolism in brain cells, particularly in astrocytes. To investigate the regulation of iron metabolism in astrocytes we have used primary astrocyte cultures from the brains of newborn rats. After application of ferric ammonium citrate (FAC), cultured astrocytes accumulated iron in a time- (0-48 h) and concentration-dependent (0.01-1 mm) manner. This accumulation was prevented if FAC was applied in combination with the iron-chelator deferoxamine (DFX). Application of FAC to astrocyte cultures caused a strong increase in the cellular content of the iron storage protein ferritin and a decrease in the amount of transferrin receptor (TfR), which is involved in the transferrin-mediated uptake of iron into cells. In contrast, application of DFX strongly increased the level of TfR. Both up-regulation of ferritin content by iron application and up-regulation of TfR content by DFX were prevented by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX). During incubation of astrocytes with FAC, a mild and transient increase in the extracellular activity of the cytosolic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase and in the concentration of intracellular ROS was observed. In contrast, prevention of protein synthesis by CHX during incubation with FAC resulted in significantly more cell loss and a persistent and intense increase in the production of intracellular ROS. These results demonstrate that both iron accumulation and deprivation modulate the synthesis of ferritin and TfR in astrocytes and that protein synthesis is required to prevent iron-mediated toxicity in astrocytes.  相似文献   

18.
Citrate as a siderophore in Bradyrhizobium japonicum.   总被引:14,自引:6,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Under iron-limiting conditions, many bacteria secrete ferric iron-specific ligands, generically termed siderophores, to aid in the sequestering and transport of iron. One strain of the nitrogen-fixing soybean symbiont Bradyrhizobium japonicum, 61A152, was shown to produce a siderophore when 20 B. japonicum strains were screened with all six chemical assays commonly used to detect such production. Production by strain 61A152 was detected via the chrome azurol S assay, a general test for siderophores which is independent of siderophore structure. The iron-chelating compound was neither a catechol nor a hydroxamate and was ninhydrin negative. It was determined to be citric acid via a combination of thin-layer chromatography and high-voltage paper electrophoresis; this identification was verified by a specific enzymatic assay for citric acid. The inverse correlation which was observed between citric acid release and the iron content of the medium suggested that ferric citrate could serve as an iron source. This was confirmed via growth and transport assays. Exogenously added ferric citrate could be used to overcome iron starvation, and iron-deficient cells actively transported radiolabeled ferric citrate. These results, taken together, indicate a role for ferric citrate in the iron nutrition of this strain, which has been shown to be an efficient nitrogen-fixing strain on a variety of soybean cultivars.  相似文献   

19.
We genetically engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae to express ferritin, a ubiquitous iron storage protein, with the major heavy-chain subunit of tadpole ferritin. A 450-kDa ferritin complex can store up to 4,500 iron atoms in its central cavity. We cloned the tadpole ferritin heavy-chain gene (TFH) into the yeast shuttle vector YEp352 under the control of a hybrid alcohol dehydrogenase II and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase promoter. We confirmed transformation and expression by Northern blot analysis of the recombinant yeast, by Western blot analysis using an antibody against Escherichia coli-expressed TFH, and with Prussian blue staining that indicated that the yeast-expressed tadpole ferritin was assembled into a complex that could bind iron. The recombinant yeast was more iron tolerant in that 95% of transformed cells, but none of the recipient strain cells, could form colonies on plates containing 30 mM ferric citrate. The cell-associated concentration of iron was 500 microg per gram (dry cell weight) of the recombinant yeast but was 210 microg per gram (dry cell weight) in the wild type. These findings indicate that the iron-carrying capacity of yeast is improved by heterologous expression of tadpole ferritin and suggests that this approach may help relieve dietary iron deficiencies in domesticated animals by the use of the engineered yeast as a feed and food supplement.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: Both iron and the major iron-binding protein ferritin are enriched in oligodendrocytes compared with astrocytes and neurons, but their functional role remains to be determined. Progressive hypoxia dramatically induces the synthesis of ferritin in both neonatal rat oligodendrocytes and a human oligodendroglioma cell line. We now report that the release of iron from either transferrin or ferritin-bound iron, after a decrease in intracellular pH, also leads to the induction of ferritin synthesis. The hypoxic induction of ferritin synthesis can be blocked either with iron chelators (deferoxamine or phenanthroline) or by preventing intracellular acidification (which is required for the release of transferrin-bound iron) with weak base treatment (ammonium chloride and amantadine). Two sources of exogenous iron (hemin and ferric ammonium citrate) were able to stimulate ferritin synthesis in both oligodendrocytes and HOG in the absence of hypoxia. This was not additive to the hypoxic stimulation, suggesting a common mechanism. We also show that ferritin induction may require intracellular free radical formation because hypoxia-mediated ferritin synthesis can be further enhanced by cotreatment with hydrogen peroxide. This in turn was blocked by the addition of exogenous catalase to the culture medium. Our data suggest that disruption of intracellular free iron homeostasis is an early event in hypoxic oligodendrocytes and that ferritin may serve as an iron sequestrator and antioxidant to protect cells from subsequent iron-catalyzed lipid peroxidation injury.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号