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1.
The essential P-loop NTPases Cfd1 and Nbp35 of the cytosolic iron-sulfur (Fe-S) protein assembly machinery perform a scaffold function for Fe-S cluster synthesis. Both proteins contain a nucleotide binding motif of unknown function and a C-terminal motif with four conserved cysteine residues. The latter motif defines the Mrp/Nbp35 subclass of P-loop NTPases and is suspected to be involved in transient Fe-S cluster binding. To elucidate the function of these two motifs, we first created cysteine mutant proteins of Cfd1 and Nbp35 and investigated the consequences of these mutations by genetic, cell biological, biochemical, and spectroscopic approaches. The two central cysteine residues (CPXC) of the C-terminal motif were found to be crucial for cell viability, protein function, coordination of a labile [4Fe-4S] cluster, and Cfd1-Nbp35 hetero-tetramer formation. Surprisingly, the two proximal cysteine residues were dispensable for all these functions, despite their strict evolutionary conservation. Several lines of evidence suggest that the C-terminal CPXC motifs of Cfd1-Nbp35 coordinate a bridging [4Fe-4S] cluster. Upon mutation of the nucleotide binding motifs Fe-S clusters could no longer be assembled on these proteins unless wild-type copies of Cfd1 and Nbp35 were present in trans. This result indicated that Fe-S cluster loading on these scaffold proteins is a nucleotide-dependent step. We propose that the bridging coordination of the C-terminal Fe-S cluster may be ideal for its facile assembly, labile binding, and efficient transfer to target Fe-S apoproteins, a step facilitated by the cytosolic iron-sulfur (Fe-S) protein assembly proteins Nar1 and Cia1 in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
The assembly of cytosolic and nuclear iron-sulfur (Fe/S) proteins in yeast is dependent on the iron-sulfur cluster assembly and export machineries in mitochondria and three recently identified extramitochondrial proteins, the P-loop NTPases Cfd1 and Nbp35 and the hydrogenase-like Nar1. However, the molecular mechanism of Fe/S protein assembly in the cytosol is far from being understood, and more components are anticipated to take part in this process. Here, we have identified and functionally characterized a novel WD40 repeat protein, designated Cia1, as an essential component required for Fe/S cluster assembly in vivo on cytosolic and nuclear, but not mitochondrial, Fe/S proteins. Surprisingly, Nbp35 and Nar1, themselves Fe/S proteins, could assemble their Fe/S clusters in the absence of Cia1, demonstrating that these components act before Cia1. Consequently, Cia1 is involved in a late step of Fe/S cluster incorporation into target proteins. Coimmunoprecipitation assays demonstrated a specific interaction between Cia1 and Nar1. In contrast to the mostly cytosolic Nar1, Cia1 is preferentially localized to the nucleus, suggesting an additional function of Cia1. Taken together, our results indicate that Cia1 is a new member of the cytosolic Fe/S protein assembly (CIA) machinery participating in a step after Nbp35 and Nar1.  相似文献   

3.
Iron-Sulfur (Fe-S) proteins are involved in many biological functions such as electron transport, photosynthesis, regulation of gene expression and enzymatic activities. Biosynthesis and transfer of Fe-S clusters depend on Fe-S clusters assembly processes such as ISC, SUF, NIF, and CIA systems. Unlike other eukaryotes which possess ISC and CIA systems, amitochondriate Entamoeba histolytica has retained NIF & CIA systems for Fe-S cluster assembly in the cytosol. In the present study, we have elucidated interaction between two proteins of E. histolytica CIA system, Cytosolic Fe-S cluster deficient 1 (Cfd1) protein and Nucleotide binding protein 35 (Nbp35). In-silico analysis showed that structural regions ranging from amino acid residues (P33-K35, G131-V135 and I147-E151) of Nbp35 and (G5-V6, M34-D39 and G46-A52) of Cfd1 are involved in the formation of protein-protein complex. Furthermore, Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations study suggested that hydrophobic forces surpass over hydrophilic forces between Nbp35 and Cfd1 and Van-der-Waal interaction plays crucial role in the formation of stable complex. Both proteins were separately cloned, expressed as recombinant fusion proteins in E. coli and purified to homogeneity by affinity column chromatography. Physical interaction between Nbp35 and Cfd1 proteins was confirmed in vitro by co-purification of recombinant Nbp35 with thrombin digested Cfd1 and in vivo by pull down assay and immunoprecipitation. The insilico, in vitro as well as in vivo results prove a stable interaction between these two proteins, supporting the possibility of its involvement in Fe-S cluster transfer to target apo-proteins through CIA machinery in E. histolytica. Our study indicates that initial synthesis of a Fe-S precursor in mitochondria is not necessary for the formation of Cfd1-Nbp35 complex. Thus, Cfd1 and Nbp35 with the help of cytosolic NifS and NifU proteins can participate in the maturation of non-mitosomal Fe-S proteins without any apparent assistance of mitosomes.  相似文献   

4.
In photosynthetic eukaryotes assembly components of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cofactors have been studied in plastids and mitochondria, but how cytosolic and nuclear Fe-S cluster proteins are assembled is not known. We have characterized a plant P loop NTPase with sequence similarity to Nbp35 of yeast and mammals, a protein of the cytosolic Cfd1-Nbp35 complex mediating Fe-S cluster assembly. Genome analysis revealed that NBP35 is conserved in the green lineage but that CFD1 is absent. Moreover, plant and algal NBP35 proteins lack the characteristic CXXC motif in the C terminus, thought to be required for Fe-S cluster binding. Nevertheless, chemical reconstitution and spectroscopy showed that Arabidopsis (At) NBP35 bound a [4Fe-4S] cluster in the C terminus as well as a stable [4Fe-4S] cluster in the N terminus. Holo-AtNBP35 was able to transfer an Fe-S cluster to an apoprotein in vitro. When expressed in yeast, AtNBP35 bound 55Fe dependent on the cysteine desulfurase Nfs1 and was able to partially rescue the growth of a cfd1 mutant but not of an nbp35 mutant. The AtNBP35 gene is constitutively expressed in planta, and its disruption was associated with an arrest of embryo development. These results show that despite considerable divergence from the yeast Cfd1-Nbp35 Fe-S scaffold complex, AtNBP35 has retained similar Fe-S cluster binding and transfer properties and performs an essential function.  相似文献   

5.
P-loop NTPases of the ApbC/Nbp35 family are involved in FeS protein maturation in nearly all organisms and are proposed to function as scaffolds for initial FeS cluster assembly. In yeast and animals, Cfd1 and Nbp35 are homologous P-loop NTPases that form a heterotetrameric complex essential for FeS protein maturation through the cytosolic FeS cluster assembly (CIA) pathway. Cfd1 is conserved in animals, fungi, and several archaeal species, but in many organisms, only Nbp35 is present, raising the question of the unique roles played by Cfd1 and Nbp35. To begin to investigate this issue, we examined Cfd1 and Nbp35 function in budding yeast. About half of each protein was detected in a heterocomplex in logarithmically growing yeast. Nbp35 readily bound 55Fe when fed to cells, whereas 55Fe binding by free Cfd1 could not be detected. Rapid 55Fe binding to and release from Nbp35 was impaired by Cfd1 deficiency. A Cfd1 mutation that caused a defect in heterocomplex stability supported iron binding to Nbp35 but impaired iron release. Our results suggest a model in which Cfd1-Nbp35 interaction increases the lability of assembled FeS on the Nbp35 scaffold for transfer to target apo-FeS proteins.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
Nbp35 and Cfd1 are prototypical members of the MRP/Nbp35 class of iron-sulfur (FeS) cluster scaffolds that function to assemble nascent FeS clusters for transfer to FeS-requiring enzymes. Both proteins contain a conserved NTPase domain that genetic studies have demonstrated is essential for their cluster assembly activity inside the cell. It was recently reported that these proteins possess no or very low nucleotide hydrolysis activity in vitro, and thus the role of the NTPase domain in cluster biogenesis has remained uncertain. We have reexamined the NTPase activity of Nbp35, Cfd1, and their complex. Using in vitro assays and site-directed mutagenesis, we demonstrate that the Nbp35 homodimer and the Nbp35-Cfd1 heterodimer are ATPases, whereas the Cfd1 homodimer exhibited no or very low ATPase activity. We ruled out the possibility that the observed ATP hydrolysis activity might result from a contaminating ATPase by showing that mutation of key active site residues reduced activity to background levels. Finally, we demonstrate that the fluorescent ATP analog 2′/3′-O-(N′-methylanthraniloyl)-ATP (mantATP) binds stoichiometrically to Nbp35 with a KD = 15.6 μm and that an Nbp35 mutant deficient in ATP hydrolysis activity also displays an increased KD for mantATP. Together, our results demonstrate that the cytosolic iron-sulfur cluster assembly scaffold is an ATPase and pave the way for interrogating the role of nucleotide hydrolysis in cluster biogenesis by this large family of cluster scaffolding proteins found across all domains of life.  相似文献   

9.
Iron regulatory protein 1 (IRP1) is regulated through the assembly/disassembly of a [4Fe-4S] cluster, which interconverts IRP1 with cytosolic aconitase. A genetic screen to isolate Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains bearing mutations in genes required for the conversion of IRP1 to c-aconitase led to the identification of a previously uncharacterized, essential gene, which we call CFD1 (cytosolic Fe-S cluster deficient). CFD1 encodes a highly conserved, putative P-loop ATPase. A non-lethal mutation of CFD1 (cfd1-1) reduced c-aconitase specific activity in IRP1-transformed yeast by >90%, although IRP1 in these cells could be readily converted to c-aconitase in vitro upon incubation with iron alone. IRP1-transformed cfd1-1 yeast lacked EPR-detectable Fe-S clusters in c-aconitase, pointing to a defect in Fe-S cluster assembly. The specific activity of another cytosolic Fe-S protein, Leu1p, was also inhibited by >90% in cfd1-1 yeast, whereas activity of mitochondrial Fe-S proteins was not inhibited. Consistent with a cytosolic site of activity, Cfd1p was localized in the cytoplasm. To our knowledge, Cfd1p is the first cytoplasmic Fe-S cluster assembly factor described in eukaryotes.  相似文献   

10.
Iron-sulfur proteins play physiologically important roles in a variety of metabolic processes in eukaryotes. In plants, iron-sulfur cluster biosynthesis is known to take place both in mitochondria and chloroplasts. However no components that mediate iron-sulfur cluster delivery in the plant cell cytosol have been identified so far. Here we report identification and characterization of a cytosolic Nbp35 homolog named AtNbp35 from Arabidopsis thaliana. AtNbp35-deficient Arabidopsis mutants were seedling lethal. Unlike the previously characterized yeast ScNbp35 which forms a heterotetramer with ScCfd1, AtNbp35 forms a homodimer in the cytosol and can harbor both [4Fe-4S] and [2Fe-2S] clusters on its amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains, respectively. Taken together, our data suggest that Nbp35 plays a pivotal role in iron-sulfur cluster assembly and delivery in the plant cell cytosol as a bifunctional molecular scaffold.  相似文献   

11.
A-type carrier (ATC) proteins of the Isc (iron-sulfur cluster) and Suf (sulfur mobilization) iron-sulfur ([Fe-S]) cluster biogenesis pathways are proposed to traffic preformed [Fe-S] clusters to apoprotein targets. In this study, we analyzed the roles of the ATC proteins ErpA, IscA, and SufA in the maturation of the nitrate-inducible, multisubunit anaerobic respiratory enzymes formate dehydrogenase N (Fdh-N) and nitrate reductase (Nar). Mutants lacking SufA had enhanced activities of both enzymes. While both Fdh-N and Nar activities were strongly reduced in an iscA mutant, both enzymes were inactive in an erpA mutant and in a mutant unable to synthesize the [Fe-S] cluster scaffold protein IscU. It could be shown for both Fdh-N and Nar that loss of enzyme activity correlated with absence of the [Fe-S] cluster-containing small subunit. Moreover, a slowly migrating form of the catalytic subunit FdnG of Fdh-N was observed, consistent with impeded twin arginine translocation (TAT)-dependent transport. The highly related Fdh-O enzyme was also inactive in the erpA mutant. Although the Nar enzyme has its catalytic subunit NarG localized in the cytoplasm, it also exhibited aberrant migration in an erpA iscA mutant, suggesting that these modular enzymes lack catalytic integrity due to impaired cofactor biosynthesis. Cross-complementation experiments demonstrated that multicopy IscA could partially compensate for lack of ErpA with respect to Fdh-N activity but not Nar activity. These findings suggest that ErpA and IscA have overlapping roles in assembly of these anaerobic respiratory enzymes but demonstrate that ErpA is essential for the production of active enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Defects in the yeast cysteine desulfurase Nfs1 cause a severe impairment in the 2-thio modification of uridine of mitochondrial tRNAs (mt-tRNAs) and cytosolic tRNAs (cy-tRNAs). Nfs1 can also provide the sulfur atoms of the iron-sulfur (Fe/S) clusters generated by the mitochondrial and cytosolic Fe/S cluster assembly machineries, termed ISC and CIA, respectively. Therefore, a key question remains as to whether the biosynthesis of Fe/S clusters is a prerequisite for the 2-thio modification of the tRNAs in both of the subcellular compartments of yeast cells. To elucidate this question, we asked whether mitochondrial ISC and/or cytosolic CIA components besides Nfs1 were involved in the 2-thio modification of these tRNAs. We demonstrate here that the three CIA components, Cfd1, Nbp35, and Cia1, are required for the 2-thio modification of cy-tRNAs but not of mt-tRNAs. Interestingly, the mitochondrial scaffold proteins Isu1 and Isu2 are required for the 2-thio modification of the cy-tRNAs but not of the mt-tRNAs, while mitochondrial Nfs1 is required for both 2-thio modifications. These results clearly indicate that the 2-thio modification of cy-tRNAs is Fe/S protein dependent and thus requires both CIA and ISC machineries but that of mt-tRNAs is Fe/S cluster independent and does not require key mitochondrial ISC components except for Nfs1.  相似文献   

13.
Iron-sulfur clusters ([Fe-S] clusters) are assembled on molecular scaffolds and subsequently used for maturation of proteins that require [Fe-S] clusters for their functions. Previous studies have shown that Azotobacter vinelandii produces at least two [Fe-S] cluster assembly scaffolds: NifU, required for the maturation of nitrogenase, and IscU, required for the general maturation of other [Fe-S] proteins. A. vinelandii also encodes a protein designated NfuA, which shares amino acid sequence similarity with the C-terminal region of NifU. The activity of aconitase, a [4Fe-4S] cluster-containing enzyme, is markedly diminished in a strain containing an inactivated nfuA gene. This inactivation also results in a null-growth phenotype when the strain is cultivated under elevated oxygen concentrations. NifU has a limited ability to serve the function of NfuA, as its expression at high levels corrects the defect of the nfuA-disrupted strain. Spectroscopic and analytical studies indicate that one [4Fe-4S] cluster can be assembled in vitro within a dimeric form of NfuA. The resultant [4Fe-4S] cluster-loaded form of NfuA is competent for rapid in vitro activation of apo-aconitase. Based on these results a model is proposed where NfuA could represent a class of intermediate [Fe-S] cluster carriers involved in [Fe-S] protein maturation.  相似文献   

14.
In genetic screens for ribosomal export mutants, we identified CFD1, NBP35 and NAR1 as factors involved in ribosome biogenesis. Notably, these components were recently reported to function in extramitochondrial iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster biosynthesis. In particular, Nar1 was implicated to generate the Fe-S clusters within Rli1, a potential substrate protein of unknown function. We tested whether the Fe-S protein Rli1 functions in ribosome formation. We report that rli1 mutants are impaired in pre-rRNA processing and defective in the export of both ribosomal subunits. In addition, Rli1p is associated with both pre-40S particles and mature 40S subunits, and with the eIF3 translation initiation factor complex. Our data reveal an unexpected link between ribosome biogenesis and the biosynthetic pathway of cytoplasmic Fe-S proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Iron-sulfur clusters may have been the earliest catalytic cofactors on earth, and most modern organisms use them extensively. Although members of the Archaea produce numerous iron-sulfur proteins, the major cluster assembly proteins found in the Bacteria and Eukarya are not universally conserved in archaea. Free-living archaea do have homologs of the bacterial apbC and eukaryotic NBP35 genes that encode iron-sulfur cluster carrier proteins. This study exploits the genetic system of Salmonella enterica to examine the in vivo functionality of apbC/NBP35 homologs from three archaea: Methanococcus maripaludis, Methanocaldococcus jannaschii, and Sulfolobus solfataricus. All three archaeal homologs could correct the tricarballylate growth defect of an S. enterica apbC mutant. Additional genetic studies showed that the conserved Walker box serine and the Cys-X-X-Cys motif of the M. maripaludis MMP0704 protein were both required for function in vivo but that the amino-terminal ferredoxin domain was not. MMP0704 protein and an MMP0704 variant protein missing the N-terminal ferredoxin domain were purified, and the Fe-S clusters were chemically reconstituted. Both proteins bound equimolar concentrations of Fe and S and had UV-visible spectra similar to those of known [4Fe-4S] cluster-containing proteins. This family of dimeric iron-sulfur carrier proteins evolved before the archaeal and eukaryal lineages diverged, representing an ancient mode of cluster assembly.Members of the Archaea produce many proteins that require iron-sulfur cluster cofactors, including redox proteins, aconitase-like dehydratases, radical S-adenosylmethionine enzymes, and RNA polymerase (9, 13, 18, 32). Methanogenic archaea are obligate anaerobes, and many heterotrophic archaea grow anaerobically, indicating that oxidative stress has not limited the proliferation of iron-sulfur proteins in these lineages. Archaea must have a mechanism to assemble Fe-S clusters, but many members lack homologs of the known bacterial and eukaryotic Nif or Isc systems, suggesting that an alternative system is present (see Table S1 in the supplemental material) (14, 15).Some euryarchaea have homologs of the bacterial genes iscS (encoding cysteine desulfurase) and iscU (encoding a scaffold protein). Yet many other archaea, including the euryarchaea Pyrococcus furiosus, Methanocaldococcus jannaschii, and Methanococcus maripaludis, plus most crenarchaea, either lack a homologous cysteine desulfurase gene or have no homologs of A-type or U-type scaffold genes. Due to their sulfide-rich environments, it is reasonable that the anaerobic archaea may use an inorganic sulfur source to assemble Fe-S clusters. Most archaeal genome sequences do carry homologs of the sufBC genes that are part of the alternative Suf system for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis (36). Biochemical studies have shown that SufC is an ABC-type ATPase and that SufB is a persulfide acceptor that may act as a site for Fe-S cluster assembly (20). The SufB and SufC proteins interact, and SufB stimulates the ATPase activity of SufC. We hypothesize that the Archaea share a common mechanism for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis, supplemented with genes acquired by horizontal gene transfer in some lineages.A screen for Salmonella enterica bacteria defective in thiamine biosynthesis identified lesions in the apbC locus (28) that compromised Fe-S metabolism (33). An abpC mutant cannot grow with tricarballylate as a carbon and energy source, which may be due to a defect in assembling or repairing [4Fe-4S] clusters in the membrane-bound TcuB protein (21, 22). ApbC is a 40-kDa cytoplasmic protein with Walker A and B nucleotide-binding domains and two conserved carboxy-terminal cysteine residues separated by two amino acids (Cys-X-X-Cys). Mutational analyses have shown that ApbC proteins with directed changes in the Cys-X-X-Cys or Walker A motifs are not active in vivo (6). Suppressor analysis allowed the conclusion that a degree of functional redundancy between ApbC and the Fe-S scaffold protein IscU exists (4, 38). Although purified ApbC does not contain iron or sulfur, biochemical studies showed that ApbC can bind an Fe-S cluster and rapidly transfer it to an apoprotein (5).It is thought that in eukaryotes, Fe-S clusters are assembled by the mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) system (23). The clusters are transported into the cytosol and delivered by the cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly system. Two components of this system, Nbp35 and Cfd1, are homologs of bacterial ApbC (Fig. (Fig.1)1) and act as intermediate Fe-S cluster-trafficking proteins in the cytosol (16, 27, 30). Electron paramagnetic resonance, Mössbauer, and absorbance spectra of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae, human, and Arabidopsis Nbp35 holoproteins suggest that these holoproteins form dimers with stable amino-terminal [4Fe-4S] clusters and a shared carboxy-terminal [4Fe-4S] cluster (10, 34).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.A protein sequence alignment of bacterial, archaeal, and eukaryotic ApbC/Nbp35 homologs was constructed using the ClustalW program (version 1.83) (37). The sequence of the S. enterica serovar Typhimurium protein (ApbC; RefSeq accession no. NP_461098.1) is shown without the amino-terminal domain that is not homologous to the amino-terminal domains of the archaeal and eukaryotic proteins. The archaeal homologs are from S. solfataricus (SSO0460; accession no. NP_341994.1), P. furiosus (PF1145; accession no. NP_578874.1), Methanosarcina acetivorans (MA4246; accession no. NP_619111.1), M. jannaschii (MJ0283; accession no. NP_247256.1), and M. maripaludis (MMP0704; accession no. NP_987824.1). The two paralogs from S. cerevisiae are Nbp35 (accession no. NP_011424.1) and Cfd1 (accession no. NP_012263.1). Conserved amino acid residues are shown in white on a black background. Similar residues are shown in black on a gray background. The four conserved amino-terminal cysteine residues shared by the MMP0704 and Nbp35p proteins are boxed. Asterisks above the sequences indicate MMP0704 residues replaced by mutagenesis in this study. A vertical bar indicates the N termini of the truncated proteins MJ0283(19-290) and MMP0704(20-289).Archaeal homologs of bacterial ApbC and eukaryotic Nbp35 are underannotated as nucleotide-binding proteins or misannotated as cobyrinic acid a,c-diamide synthases in sequence databases. The hallmarks of the Nbp35 sequences are an amino-terminal ferredoxin-like domain, an ATP-binding motif, and two conserved carboxy-terminal cysteine residues that are believed to bind an Fe-S cluster. The amino-terminal ferredoxin-like domain is absent in the ApbC family of proteins. The ApbC and Nbp35 proteins belong to a large superfamily of P-loop-containing nucleoside triphosphate hydrolases that also includes the bacterial MinD and CooC proteins. The M. maripaludis MMP0704 protein shows approximately 40% amino acid identity to both the S. enterica ApbC and S. cerevisiae Nbp35 proteins (Fig. (Fig.1).1). However, the MMP0704 protein also shows 30% sequence identity to two paralogous proteins from M. maripaludis. The genome sequence of M. maripaludis encodes at least nine paralogs, although only the MMP0704 protein contains the conserved cysteine residues found in most ApbC/Nbp35 proteins.The experiments described herein identified the first archaeal proteins that form functional Fe-S carrier proteins. The apbC/NBP35 homologs from M. maripaludis (MMP0704), M. jannaschii (MJ0283), and Sulfolobus solfataricus (SSO0460) allowed an S. enterica strain with an apbC null mutation to grow on tricarballylate. Genetic studies showed that the Walker A box and at least one cysteine residue from the Cys-X-X-Cys motif were required for in vivo functionality. The unique amino-terminal ferredoxin-like domains of the MMP0704 and MJ0283 proteins were not required. Purified MMP0704 proteins bound Fe-S clusters. Orthologs of ApbC/Npb35 proteins were found in all of the available genomes of free-living archaea, identifying this protein family as an ancient part of the Fe-S assembly system that evolved before the divergence of Archaea and Eukarya.  相似文献   

16.
Iron-sulfur [Fe-S] clusters are ubiquitous ancient prosthetic groups that are required to sustain fundamental life processes. Formation of intracellular [Fe-S] clusters does not occur spontaneously but requires a complex biosynthetic machinery. Different types of [Fe-S] cluster assembly systems have been discovered. All of them have in common the requirement of a cysteine desulfurase and the participation of [Fe-S] scaffold proteins. The purpose of this review is to discuss various aspects of the molecular mechanisms of [Fe-S] cluster assembly in living organisms: (i) mechanism of sulfur donor enzymes, namely the cysteine desulfurases; (ii) mechanism by which clusters are preassembled on scaffold proteins and (iii) mechanism of [Fe-S] cluster transfer from scaffold to target proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Iron‑sulfur (Fe/S) clusters are versatile inorganic cofactors that play central roles in essential cellular functions, from respiration to genome stability. >30 proteins involved in Fe/S protein biogenesis in eukaryotes are known, many of which bind clusters via cysteine residues. This opens up the possibility that the thiol-reducing glutaredoxin and thioredoxin systems are required at both the Fe/S biogenesis and target protein level to counteract thiol oxidation. To address the possible interplay of thiol redox chemistry and Fe/S protein biogenesis, we have characterized the status of the mitochondrial (ISC) and cytosolic (CIA) Fe/S protein assembly machineries in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants in which the three partially redundant glutathione (Glr1) and thioredoxin (Trr1 and Trr2) oxidoreductases have been inactivated in either mitochondria, cytosol, or both compartments. Cells devoid of mitochondrial oxidoreductases maintained a functional mitochondrial ISC machinery and showed no altered iron homeostasis despite a non-functional complex II of the respiratory chain due to redox-specific defects. In cells that lack either cytosolic or total cellular thiol reducing capacity, both the ISC system and iron homeostasis were normal, yet cytosolic and nuclear Fe/S target proteins were not matured. This dysfunction could be attributed to a failure in the assembly of [4Fe‑4S] clusters in the CIA factor Nar1, even though Nar1 maintained robust protein levels and stable interactions with later-acting CIA components. Overall, our analysis has uncovered a hitherto unknown thiol-dependence of the CIA machinery and has demonstrated the surprisingly varying sensitivity of Fe/S proteins to thiol oxidation.  相似文献   

18.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) of the mitochondrial inner membrane is a multi-subunit protein complex containing eight iron-sulphur (Fe-S) clusters. Little is known about the assembly of complex I and its Fe-S clusters. Here, we report the identification of a mitochondrial protein with a nucleotide-binding domain, named Ind1, that is required specifically for the effective assembly of complex I. Deletion of the IND1 open reading frame in the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica carrying an internal alternative NADH dehydrogenase resulted in slower growth and strongly decreased complex I activity, whereas the activities of other mitochondrial Fe-S enzymes, including aconitase and succinate dehydrogenase, were not affected. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, in vitro activity tests and electron paramagnetic resonance signals of Fe-S clusters showed that only a minor fraction (approximately 20%) of complex I was assembled in the ind1 deletion mutant. Using in vivo and in vitro approaches, we found that Ind1 can bind a [4Fe-4S] cluster that was readily transferred to an acceptor Fe-S protein. Our data suggest that Ind1 facilitates the assembly of Fe-S cofactors and subunits of complex I.  相似文献   

19.
The nifU and nifS genes encode the components of a cellular machinery dedicated to the assembly of [2Fe-2S] and [4Fe-4S] clusters required for growth under nitrogen-fixing conditions. The NifU and NifS proteins are involved in the production of active forms of the nitrogenase component proteins, NifH and NifDK. Although NifH contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster, the NifDK component carries two complex metalloclusters, the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) and the [8Fe-7S] P-cluster. FeMo-co, located at the active site of NifDK, is composed of 7 iron, 9 sulfur, 1 molybdenum, 1 homocitrate, and 1 unidentified light atom. To investigate whether NifUS are required for FeMo-co biosynthesis and to understand at what level(s) they might participate in this process, we analyzed the effect of nifU and nifS mutations on the formation of active NifB protein and on the accumulation of NifB-co, an isolatable intermediate of the FeMo-co biosynthetic pathway synthesized by the product of the nifB gene. The nifU and nifS genes were required to accumulate NifB-co in a nifN mutant background. This result clearly demonstrates the participation of NifUS in NifB-co synthesis and suggests a specific role of NifUS as the major provider of [Fe-S] clusters that serve as metabolic substrates for the biosynthesis of FeMo-co. Surprisingly, although nifB expression was attenuated in nifUS mutants, the assembly of the [Fe-S] clusters of NifB was compensated by other non-nif machinery for the assembly of [Fe-S] clusters, indicating that NifUS are not essential to synthesize active NifB.  相似文献   

20.
Iron-sulfur [Fe-S] clusters are inorganic prosthetic groups that play essential roles in all living organisms. In vivo [Fe-S] cluster biogenesis requires enzymes involved in iron and sulfur mobilization, assembly of clusters, and delivery to their final acceptor. In these systems, a cysteine desulfurase is responsible for the release of sulfide ions, which are incorporated into a scaffold protein for subsequent [Fe-S] cluster assembly. Although three machineries have been shown to be present in Proteobacteria for [Fe-S] cluster biogenesis (NIF, ISC, and SUF), only the SUF machinery has been found in Firmicutes. We have recently described the structural similarities and differences between Enterococcus faecalis and Escherichia coli SufU proteins, which prompted the proposal that SufU is the scaffold protein of the E. faecalis sufCDSUB system. The present work aims at elucidating the biological roles of E. faecalis SufS and SufU proteins in [Fe-S] cluster assembly. We show that SufS has cysteine desulfurase activity and cysteine-365 plays an essential role in catalysis. SufS requires SufU as activator to [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly, as its ortholog, IscU, in which the conserved cysteine-153 acts as a proximal sulfur acceptor for transpersulfurization reaction.  相似文献   

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