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1.
The ferritin superfamily of iron storage proteins includes ferritin proper and Dps (DNA binding protein from starved cells) along with bacterioferritin. We examined the release of Fe from the Dps of Trichodesmium erythraeum (Dps(tery)) and compared it to the release of Fe from horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) under various conditions. Both desferrioxamine B (DFB), a Fe(III) chelator, and ascorbic acid were able to mobilize Fe from Dps(tery) at rates comparable to those observed for HoSF. The initial Fe release rate from both proteins increased linearly with the concentration of DFB, suggesting that the chelator binds to Fe in the protein. A small but significant rate obtained by extrapolation to zero concentration of DFB implies that Dps(tery) and HoSF might release Fe(III) spontaneously. A similar result was observed for HoSF in the presence of sulfoxine. In a different experiment, Fe(III) was transferred from holoferritin to apotransferrin across a dialysis membrane in the absence of chelator or reducing agent. The apparent spontaneous release of Fe from HoSF and Dps(tery) brings forth the hypothesis that the Fe core in Fe storage proteins might be continuously dissolving and re-precipitating in vivo, thus maintaining it in a highly reactive and bioavailable form.  相似文献   

2.
Although the role of iron in marine productivity has received a great deal of attention, no iron storage protein has been isolated from a marine microorganism previously. We describe an Fe-binding protein belonging to the Dps family (DNA binding protein from starved cells) in the N2-fixing marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium erythraeum. A dps gene encoding a protein with significant levels of identity to members of the Dps family was identified in the genome of T. erythraeum. This gene codes for a putative DpsT. erythraeurm protein (Dpstery) with 69% primary amino acid sequence similarity to Synechococcus DpsA. We expressed and purified Dpstery, and we found that Dpstery, like other Dps proteins, is able to bind Fe and DNA and protect DNA from degradation by DNase. We also found that Dpstery binds phosphate, like other ferritin family proteins. Fe K near-edge X-ray absorption of Dpstery indicated that it has an iron core that resembles that of horse spleen ferritin.  相似文献   

3.
Bacterial iron storage proteins such as ferritin serve as intracellular iron reserves. Members of the DNA protection during starvation (Dps) family of proteins are structurally related to ferritins, and their function is to protect the genome from iron-induced free radical damage. Some members of the Dps family bind DNA and are thought to do so only as fully assembled dodecamers. We present the cloning and characterization of a Dps homolog encoded by the radiation-resistant eubacterium Deinococcus radiodurans and show that DNA binding does not require its assembly into a dodecamer. D.radiodurans Dps-1, the product of gene DR2263, adopts a stably folded conformation, as demonstrated by circular dichroism spectroscopy, and undergoes a transition to a disordered state with a melting temperature of 69.2(+/-0.1) degrees C. While a dimeric form of Dps-1 is observed under low-salt conditions, a dodecameric assembly is highly favored at higher concentrations of salt. Both oligomeric forms of Dps-1 exhibit ferroxidase activity, and Fe(II) oxidation/mineralization is seen for dodecameric Dps-1. Notably, addition of Ca(2+) (to millimolar concentrations) to dodecameric Dps-1 can result in the reduction of bound Fe(III). Dimeric Dps-1 protects DNA from both hydroxyl radical cleavage and from DNase I-mediated cleavage; however, dodecameric Dps-1 is unable to provide efficient protection against hydroxyl radical-mediated DNA cleavage. While dodecameric Dps-1 does bind DNA, resulting in formation of large aggregates, cooperative DNA binding by dimeric Dps-1 leads to formation of protein-DNA complexes of finite stoichiometry.  相似文献   

4.
The neutrophil-activating protein (HP-NAP) of Helicobacter pylori is a major 17 kDa antigen of the immune response of infected individuals. Amino acid sequence comparison indicated a high similarity between HP-NAP and both bacterial DNA-protecting proteins (Dps) and ferritins. The structure prediction and spectroscopic analysis presented here indicate a close similarity between HP-NAP and Dps. Electron microscopy revealed that HP-NAP forms hexagonal rings of 9-10 nm diameter with a hollow central core as seen in Dps proteins, clearly different from the 12 nm icositetrameric (24 subunits) ferritins. However, HP-NAP is resistant to thermal and chemical denaturation similar to the ferritin family of proteins. In addition, HP-NAP binds up to 40 atoms of iron per monomer and does not bind DNA. We therefore conclude that HP-NAP is an unusual, small, ferritin that folds into a four-helix bundle that oligomerizes into dodecamers with a central hole capable of binding up to 500 iron atoms per oligomer.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Dps (DNA protection during starvation) proteins, mini-ferritins in the ferritin superfamily, catalyze Fe(2+)/H(2)O(2)/O(2) reactions and make minerals inside protein nanocages to minimize radical oxygen-chemistry (metal/osmotic/temperature/nutrient/oxidant) and sometimes to confer virulence. Paired Dps proteins in Bacillus, rare in other bacteria, have 60% sequence identity. To explore functional differences in paired Bacilli Dps protein, we measured ferroxidase activity and DNA protection (hydroxyl radical) for Dps protein dodecamers from Bacillus anthracis (Ba) since crystal structures and iron mineralization (iron-stain) were known. The self-assembled (200 kDa) Ba Dps1 (Dlp-1) and Ba Dps2 (Dlp-2) proteins had similar Fe(2+)/O(2) kinetics, with space for minerals of 500 iron atoms/protein, and protected DNA. The reactions with Fe(2+) were novel in several ways: 1) Ba Dps2 reactions (Fe(2+)/H(2)O(2)) proceeded via an A(650 nm) intermediate, with similar rates to maxi-ferritins (Fe(2+)/O(2)), indicating a new Dps protein reaction pathway, 2) Ba Dps2 reactions (Fe(2+)/O(2) versus Fe(2+)/O(2) + H(2)O(2)) differed 3-fold contrasting with Escherichia coli Dps reactions, with 100-fold differences, and 3) Ba Dps1, inert in Fe(2+)/H(2)O(2) catalysis, inhibited protein-independent Fe(2+)/H(2)O(2) reactions. Sequence similarities between Ba Dps1 and Bacillus subtilis DpsA (Dps1), which is regulated by general stress factor (SigmaB) and Fur, and between Ba Dps2 and B. subtilis MrgA, which is regulated by H(2)O(2) (PerR), suggest the function of Ba Dps1 is iron sequestration and the function of Ba Dps2 is H(2)O(2) destruction, important in host/pathogen interactions. Destruction of H(2)O(2) by Ba Dps2 proceeds via an unknown mechanism with an intermediate similar spectrally (A(650 nm)) and kinetically to the maxi-ferritin diferric peroxo complex.  相似文献   

7.
Iron is required by most organisms, but is potentially toxic due to the low solubility of the stable oxidation state, Fe(III), and to the tendency to potentiate the production of reactive oxygen species, ROS. The reactivity of iron is counteracted by bacteria with the same strategies employed by the host, namely by sequestering the metal into ferritin, the ubiquitous iron storage protein. Ferritins are highly conserved, hollow spheres constructed from 24 subunits that are endowed with ferroxidase activity and can harbour up to 4500 iron atoms as oxy-hydroxide micelles. The release of the metal upon reduction can alter the microorganism-host iron balance and hence permit bacteria to overcome iron limitation. In bacteria, the relevance of the Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells) family in iron storage-detoxification has been recognized recently. The seminal studies on the protein from Listeria innocua demonstrated that Dps proteins have ferritin-like activity and most importantly have the capacity to attenuate the production of ROS. This latter function allows bacterial pathogens that lack catalase, e.g. Porphyromonas gingivalis, to survive in an aerobic environment and resist to peroxide stress.  相似文献   

8.
Ferritins are ubiquitous iron (Fe) storage proteins that play a fundamental role in cellular Fe homeostasis. The enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium possesses four ferritins: bacterioferritin, ferritin A, ferritin B and Dps. The haem-containing bacterioferritin (Bfr) accounts for the majority of stored Fe, followed by ferritin A (FtnA). Inactivation of bfr elevates the intracellular free Fe concentration and enhances susceptibility to H2O2 stress. The DNA-binding Dps protein provides protection from oxidative damage without affecting the steady-state intracellular free Fe concentration. FtnB appears to be particularly important for the repair of oxidatively damaged Fe-sulphur clusters of aconitase and, in contrast to Bfr and FtnA, is required for Salmonella virulence in mice. Moreover, ftnB and dps are repressed by the Fe-responsive regulator Fur and induced under conditions of Fe limitation, whereas bfr and ftnA are maximally expressed when Fe is abundant. The absence of a conserved ferroxidase domain and the potentiation of oxidative stress by FtnB in some strains lacking Dps suggest that FtnB serves as a facile cellular reservoir of Fe2+.  相似文献   

9.
We identified and characterized the iron-binding protein Dps from Campylobacter jejuni. Electron microscopic analysis of this protein revealed a spherical structure of 8.5 nm in diameter, with an electron-dense core similar to those of other proteins of the Dps (DNA-binding protein from starved cells) family. Cloning and sequencing of the Dps-encoding gene (dps) revealed that a 450-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoded a protein of 150 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 17,332 Da. Amino acid sequence comparison indicated a high similarity between C. jejuni Dps and other Dps family proteins. In C. jejuni Dps, there are iron-binding motifs, as reported in other Dps family proteins. C. jejuni Dps bound up to 40 atoms of iron per monomer, whereas it did not appear to bind DNA. An isogenic dps-deficient mutant was more vulnerable to hydrogen peroxide than its parental strain, as judged by growth inhibition tests. The iron chelator Desferal restored the resistance of the Dps-deficient mutant to hydrogen peroxide, suggesting that this iron-binding protein prevented generation of hydroxyl radicals via the Fenton reaction. Dps was constitutively expressed during both exponential and stationary phase, and no induction was observed when the cells were exposed to H(2)O(2) or grown under iron-supplemented or iron-restricted conditions. On the basis of these data, we propose that this iron-binding protein in C. jejuni plays an important role in protection against hydrogen peroxide stress by sequestering intracellular free iron and is expressed constitutively to cope with the harmful effect of hydrogen peroxide stress on this microaerophilic organism without delay.  相似文献   

10.
Storage of iron in a nontoxic and bioavailable form is essential for many forms of life. Three subfamilies of the ferritin-like superfamily, namely, ferritin, bacterioferritin, and Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells), are able to store iron. Although the function of these iron-storage proteins is constitutive to many organisms to sustain life, the genome of some organisms appears not to encode any of these proteins. In an attempt to identify new iron-storage systems, we have found and characterized a new member of the ferritin-like superfamily of proteins, which unlike the multimeric storage system of ferritin, bacterioferritin, and Dps is monomeric in the absence of iron. Monomers catalyze oxidation of Fe(II) and they store the Fe(III) product as they assemble to form structures comparable to those of 24-meric ferritin. We propose that this mechanism is an alternative method of iron storage by the ferritin-like superfamily of proteins in organisms that lack the regular preassociated 24-meric/12-meric ferritins.  相似文献   

11.
The Dps family members constitute a distinct group of multimeric and ferritin-like iron binding proteins (up to 500 iron atoms/12-mer) that are widespread in eubacteria and archaea and implicated in oxidative stress resistance and virulence. Despite the wealth of structural knowledge, the mechanism of iron incorporation has remained elusive. Here, we provide evidence on Dpr of the swine and human pathogen Streptococcus suis that: (i) iron incorporation proceeds by Fe(II) binding, Fe(II) oxidation and subsequent storage as Fe(III); (ii) Fe(II) atoms enter the 12-mer cavity through four hydrophilic pores; and (iii) Fe(II) atoms are oxidized inside the 12-mer cavity at 12 identical inter-subunit sites, which are structurally different but functionally equivalent to the ferroxidase centres of classical ferritins. We also provide evidence, by deleting and ectopically overexpressing Dpr, that Dpr affects cellular iron homeostasis. The key residues responsible for iron incorporation in S. suis Dpr are well conserved throughout the Dps family. A model for the iron incorporation mechanism of the Dps/Dpr ferritin-like protein is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
DNA-binding proteins from starved cells (Dps proteins) protect bacteria primarily from oxidative damage. They are composed of 12 identical subunits assembled with 23-symmetry to form a compact cage-like structure known to be stable at temperatures > 70 degrees C and over a wide pH range. Thermosynechococcus elongatus Dps thermostability is increased dramatically relative to mesophilic Dps proteins. Hydrophobic interactions at the dimeric and trimeric interfaces called Dps-like are replaced by salt bridges and hydrogen bonds, a common strategy in thermophiles. Moreover, the buried surface area at the least-extended Dps-like interface is significantly increased. A peculiarity of T. elongatus Dps is the presence of a chloride ion coordinated with threefold symmetry-related arginine residues lining the opening of the Dps-like pore toward the internal cavity. T. elongatus Dps conserves the unusual intersubunit ferroxidase centre that allows the Dps protein family to oxidize Fe(II) with hydrogen peroxide, thereby inhibiting free radical production via Fenton chemistry. This catalytic property is of special importance in T. elongatus (which lacks the catalase gene) in the protection of DNA and photosystems I and II from hydrogen peroxide-mediated oxidative damage.  相似文献   

13.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells), encoded by the dps gene located on the circular chromosome of this plant pathogen, was cloned, and its structural and functional properties were determined in vitro. In Escherichia coli Dps, the family prototype, the DNA binding properties are thought to be associated with the presence of the lysine-containing N-terminal tail that extends from the protein surface into the solvent. The x-ray crystal structure of A. tumefaciens Dps shows that the positively charged N-terminal tail, which is 11 amino acids shorter than in the E. coli protein, is blocked onto the protein surface. This feature accounts for the lack of interaction with DNA. The intersubunit ferroxidase center characteristic of Dps proteins is conserved and confers to the A. tumefaciens protein a ferritin-like activity that manifests itself in the capacity to oxidize and incorporate iron in the internal cavity and to release it after reduction. In turn, sequestration of Fe(II) correlates with the capacity of A. tumefaciens Dps to reduce the production of hydroxyl radicals from H2O2 through Fenton chemistry. These data demonstrate conclusively that DNA protection from oxidative damage in vitro does not require formation of a Dps-DNA complex. In vivo, the hydroxyl radical scavenging activity of A. tumefaciens Dps may be envisaged to act in concert with catalase A to counteract the toxic effect of H2O2, the major component of the plant defense system when challenged by the bacterium.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Dps, the DNA‐binding protein from starved cells, is capable of providing protection to cells during exposure to severe environmental assaults; including oxidative stress and nutritional deprivation. The structure and function of Dps have been the subject of numerous studies and have been examined in several bacteria that possess Dps or a structural/functional homologue of the protein. Additionally, the involvement of Dps in stress resistance has been researched extensively as well. The ability of Dps to provide multifaceted protection is based on three intrinsic properties of the protein: DNA binding, iron sequestration, and its ferroxidase activity. These properties also make Dps extremely important in iron and hydrogen peroxide detoxification and acid resistance as well. Regulation of Dps expression in E. coli is complex and partially dependent on the physiological state of the cell. Furthermore, it is proposed that Dps itself plays a role in gene regulation during starvation, ultimately making the cell more resistant to cytotoxic assaults by controlling the expression of genes necessary for (or deleterious to) stress resistance. The current review focuses on the aforementioned properties of Dps in E. coli, its prototypic organism. The consequences of elucidating the protective mechanisms of this protein are far‐reaching, as Dps homologues have been identified in over 1000 distantly related bacteria and Archaea. Moreover, the prevalence of Dps and Dps‐like proteins in bacteria suggests that protection involving DNA and iron sequestration is crucial and widespread in prokaryotes.  相似文献   

16.
The DNA-binding proteins from starved cells (Dps) are a family of proteins induced in microorganisms by oxidative or nutritional stress. Escherichia coli Dps, a structural analog of the 12-subunit Listeria innocua ferritin, binds and protects DNA against oxidative damage mediated by H(2)O(2). Dps is shown to be a Fe-binding and storage protein where Fe(II) oxidation is most effectively accomplished by H(2)O(2) rather than by O(2) as in ferritins. Two Fe(2+) ions bind at each of the 12 putative dinuclear ferroxidase sites (P(Z)) in the protein according to the equation, 2Fe(2+) + P(Z) --> [(Fe(II)(2)-P](FS)(Z+2) + 2H(+). The ferroxidase site (FS) bound iron is then oxidized according to the equation, [(Fe(II)(2)-P](FS)(Z+2) + H(2)O(2) + H(2)O --> [Fe(III)(2)O(2)(OH)-P](FS)(Z-1) + 3H(+), where two Fe(II) are oxidized per H(2)O(2) reduced, thus avoiding hydroxyl radical production through Fenton chemistry. Dps acquires a ferric core of approximately 500 Fe(III) according to the mineralization equation, 2Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) + 2H(2)O --> 2Fe(III)OOH((core)) + 4H(+), again with a 2 Fe(II)/H(2)O(2) stoichiometry. The protein forms a similar ferric core with O(2) as the oxidant, albeit at a slower rate. In the absence of H(2)O(2) and O(2), Dps forms a ferrous core of approximately 400 Fe(II) by the reaction Fe(2+) + H(2)O + Cl(-) --> Fe(II)OHCl((core)) + H(+). The ferrous core also undergoes oxidation with a stoichiometry of 2 Fe(II)/H(2)O(2). Spin trapping experiments demonstrate that Dps greatly attenuates hydroxyl radical production during Fe(II) oxidation by H(2)O(2). These results and in vitro DNA damage assays indicate that the protective effect of Dps on DNA most likely is exerted through a dual action, the physical association with DNA and the ability to nullify the toxic combination of Fe(II) and H(2)O(2). In the latter process a hydrous ferric oxide mineral core is produced within the protein, thus avoiding oxidative damage mediated by Fenton chemistry.  相似文献   

17.
The proteins belonging to the Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells) family play an important role within the bacterial defence system against oxidative stress. They act on Fe(II) and hydrogen peroxide that are potentially toxic in the presence of air. Fe(II) forms spontaneously insoluble Fe(III) and reacts with molecular oxygen or its reduced forms to yield the highly damaging hydroxyl radicals. All Dps proteins have the distinctive capacity to annul the toxic combination of iron and hydrogen peroxide as they use the latter compound to oxidise Fe(II). In addition to this intrinsic DNA protection capacity, several members of the family, including the archetypical Escherichia coli Dps, protect DNA physically by shielding it in large Dps-DNA complexes. The structural and functional characteristics that endow Dps proteins with the chemical and physical protection mechanism are presented and discussed also in the framework of the varied situations that may be encountered in different bacterial species.   相似文献   

18.
Zhao G  Arosio P  Chasteen ND 《Biochemistry》2006,45(10):3429-3436
Overexpression of human H-chain ferritin (HuHF) is known to impart a degree of protection to cells against oxidative stress and the associated damage to DNA and other cellular components. However, whether this protective activity resides in the protein's ability to inhibit Fenton chemistry as found for Dps proteins has never been established. Such inhibition does not occur with the related mitochondrial ferritin which displays much of the same iron chemistry as HuHF, including an Fe(II)/H(2)O(2) oxidation stoichiometry of approximately 2:1. In the present study, the ability of HuHF to attenuate hydroxyl radical production by the Fenton reaction (Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) --> Fe(3+) + OH(-) + *OH) was examined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping methods. The data demonstrate that the presence of wild-type HuHF during Fe(2+) oxidation by H(2)O(2) greatly decreases the amount of .OH radical produced from Fenton chemistry whereas the ferroxidase site mutant 222 (H62K + H65G) and human L-chain ferritin (HuLF) lack this activity. HuHF catalyzes the pairwise oxidation of Fe(2+) by the detoxification reaction [2Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) + 2H(2)O --> 2Fe(O)OH(core) + 4H(+)] that occurs at the ferroxidase site of the protein, thereby preventing the production of hydroxyl radical. The small amount of *OH radical that is produced in the presence of ferritin (相似文献   

19.
20.
Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells) proteins belong to a widespread bacterial family of proteins expressed under nutritional and oxidative stress conditions. In particular, Dps proteins protect DNA against Fenton-mediated oxidative stress, as they catalyze iron oxidation by hydrogen peroxide at highly conserved ferroxidase centers and thus reduce significantly hydroxyl radical production. This work investigates the possible generation of intraprotein radicals during the ferroxidation reaction by Escherichia coli and Listeria innocua Dps, two representative members of the family. Stopped-flow analyses show that the conserved tryptophan and tyrosine residues located near the metal binding/oxidation center are in a radical form after iron oxidation by hydrogen peroxide. DNA protection assays indicate that the presence of both residues is necessary to limit release of hydroxyl radicals in solution and the consequent oxidative damage to DNA. In general terms, the demonstration that conserved protein residues act as a trap that dissipates free electrons generated during the oxidative process brings out a novel role for the Dps protein cage.  相似文献   

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