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1.
Frataxin deficiency is the primary cause of Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), an autosomal recessive cardiodegenerative and neurodegenerative disease. Frataxin is a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein that is widely conserved among eukaryotes. Genetic inactivation of the yeast frataxin homologue (Yfh1p) results in mitochondrial iron accumulation and hypersensitivity to oxidative stress. Increased iron deposition and evidence of oxidative damage have also been observed in cardiac tissue and cultured fibroblasts from patients with FRDA. These findings indicate that frataxin is essential for mitochondrial iron homeostasis and protection from iron-induced formation of free radicals. The functional mechanism of frataxin, however, is still unknown. We have expressed the mature form of Yfh1p (mYfh1p) in Escherichia coli and have analyzed its function in vitro. Isolated mYfh1p is a soluble monomer (13,783 Da) that contains no iron and shows no significant tendency to self-associate. Aerobic addition of ferrous iron to mYfh1p results in assembly of regular spherical multimers with a molecular mass of approximately 1. 1 MDa (megadaltons) and a diameter of 13+/-2 nm. Each multimer consists of approximately 60 subunits and can sequester >3,000 atoms of iron. Titration of mYfh1p with increasing iron concentrations supports a stepwise mechanism of multimer assembly. Sequential addition of an iron chelator and a reducing agent results in quantitative iron release with concomitant disassembly of the multimer, indicating that mYfh1p sequesters iron in an available form. In yeast mitochondria, native mYfh1p exists as monomer and a higher-order species with a molecular weight >600,000. After addition of (55)Fe to the medium, immunoprecipitates of this species contain >16 atoms of (55)Fe per molecule of mYfh1p. We propose that iron-dependent self-assembly of recombinant mYfh1p reflects a physiological role for frataxin in mitochondrial iron sequestration and bioavailability.  相似文献   

2.
Defects in frataxin result in Friedreich ataxia, a genetic disease characterized by early onset of neurodegeneration, cardiomyopathy, and diabetes. Frataxin is a conserved mitochondrial protein that controls iron needed for iron-sulfur cluster assembly and heme synthesis and also detoxifies excess iron. Studies in vitro have shown that either monomeric or oligomeric frataxin delivers iron to other proteins, whereas ferritin-like frataxin particles convert redox-active iron to an inert mineral. We have investigated how these different forms of frataxin are regulated in vivo. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, only monomeric yeast frataxin (Yfh1) was detected in unstressed cells when mitochondrial iron uptake was maintained at a steady, low nanomolar level. Increments in mitochondrial iron uptake induced stepwise assembly of Yfh1 species ranging from trimer to > or = 24-mer, independent of interactions between Yfh1 and its major iron-binding partners, Isu1/Nfs1 or aconitase. The rate-limiting step in Yfh1 assembly was a structural transition that preceded conversion of monomer to trimer. This step was induced, independently or synergistically, by mitochondrial iron increments, overexpression of wild type Yfh1 monomer, mutations that stabilize Yfh1 trimer, or heat stress. Faster assembly kinetics correlated with reduced oxidative damage and higher levels of aconitase activity, respiratory capacity, and cell survival. However, deregulation of Yfh1 assembly resulted in Yfh1 aggregation, aconitase sequestration, and mitochondrial DNA depletion. The data suggest that Yfh1 assembly responds to dynamic changes in mitochondrial iron uptake or stress exposure in a highly controlled fashion and that this may enable frataxin to simultaneously promote respiratory function and stress tolerance.  相似文献   

3.
YFH1-mediated iron homeostasis is independent of mitochondrial respiration.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
O S Chen  J Kaplan 《FEBS letters》2001,509(1):131-134
The human gene frataxin and its yeast homolog YFH1 affect mitochondrial function. Deficits in frataxin result in Friedreich ataxia, while deletion of YFH1 results in respiratory incompetence. We determined that as long as respiratory incompetent yeast express Yfh1p they do not accumulate excessive mitochondrial iron. Deletion of YFH1 in respiratory incompetent yeast results in mitochondrial iron accumulation, while the reintroduction of Yfh1p results in mitochondrial iron export. Further, overexpression of Yfh1p has no effect on oxygen consumption in wild-type yeast grown in either fermentative or respiratory carbon sources. We conclude that the effect of Yfh1p on mitochondrial iron metabolism is independent of respiratory activity.  相似文献   

4.
Friedreich ataxia is caused by decreased levels of frataxin, a mitochondrial acidic protein that is assumed to act as chaperone in the assembly of Fe-S clusters on the scaffold Isu protein. Frataxin has the in vitro capacity to form iron-loaded multimers, which also suggests an iron storage function. It has been reported that alanine substitution of residues in an acidic ridge of yeast frataxin (Yfh1) elicits loss of iron binding in vitro but has no effect on Fe-S cluster synthesis in vivo. Here, we show that a marked change in the electrostatic properties of a specific region of Yfh1 surface - by substituting two or four acidic residues by lysine or alanine, respectively - impairs Fe-S cluster assembly, weakens the interaction between Yfh1 and Isu1, and increases oxidative damage. Therefore, the acidic ridge is essential for the Yfh1 function and is likely to be involved in iron-mediated protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Frataxin is a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein which is deficient in Friedreich's ataxia, a hereditary neurodegenerative disease. Yeast mutants lacking the yeast frataxin homologue (Yfh1p) show iron accumulation in mitochondria and increased sensitivity to oxidative stress, suggesting that frataxin plays a critical role in mitochondrial iron homeostasis and free radical toxicity. Both Yfh1p and frataxin are synthesized as larger precursor molecules that, upon import into mitochondria, are subject to two proteolytic cleavages, yielding an intermediate and a mature size form. A recent study found that recombinant rat mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP) cleaves the mouse frataxin precursor to the intermediate but not the mature form (Koutnikova, H., Campuzano, V., and Koenig, M. (1998) Hum. Mol. Gen. 7, 1485-1489), suggesting that a different peptidase might be required for production of mature size frataxin. However, in the present study we show that MPP is solely responsible for maturation of yeast and human frataxin. MPP first cleaves the precursor to intermediate form and subsequently converts the intermediate to mature size protein. In this way, MPP could influence frataxin function and indirectly affect mitochondrial iron homeostasis.  相似文献   

6.
Depletion of the mitochondrial matrix protein frataxin is the molecular cause of the neurodegenerative disease Friedreich ataxia. The function of frataxin is unclear, although recent studies have suggested a function of frataxin (yeast Yfh1) in iron/sulphur (Fe/S) protein biogenesis. Here, we show that Yfh1 specifically binds to the central Fe/S-cluster (ISC)-assembly complex, which is composed of the scaffold protein Isu1 and the cysteine desulphurase Nfs1. Association between Yfh1 and Isu1/Nfs1 was markedly increased by ferrous iron, but did not depend on ISCs on Isu1. Functional analyses in vivo showed an involvement of Yfh1 in de novo ISC synthesis on Isu1. Our data demonstrate a crucial function of Yfh1 in Fe/S protein biogenesis by defining its function in an early step of this essential process. The iron-dependent binding of Yfh1 to Isu1/Nfs1 suggests a role of frataxin/Yfh1 in iron loading of the Isu scaffold proteins.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Aloria K  Schilke B  Andrew A  Craig EA 《EMBO reports》2004,5(11):1096-1101
The neurodegenerative disease Friedreich's ataxia is caused by reduced levels of frataxin, a mitochondrial matrix protein. The in vivo role of frataxin is under debate. Frataxin, as well as its yeast homologue Yfh1, binds multiple iron atoms as an oligomer and has been proposed to function as a crucial iron-storage protein. We identified a mutant Yfh1 defective in iron-induced oligomerization. This mutant protein was able to replace functionally wild-type Yfh1, even when expressed at low levels, when mitochondrial iron levels were high and in mutant strains having deletions of genes that had synthetic growth defects with a YFH1 deletion. The ability of an oligomerization-deficient Yfh1 to function in vivo suggests that oligomerization, and thus oligomerization-induced iron storage, is not a critical function of Yfh1. Rather, the capacity of this oligomerization-deficient mutant to interact with the Isu protein suggests a more direct role of Yfh1 in iron-sulphur cluster biogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
The role of the mitochondrial protein frataxin in iron storage and detoxification, iron delivery to iron-sulfur cluster biosynthesis, heme biosynthesis, and aconitase repair has been extensively studied during the last decade. However, still no general consensus exists on the details of the mechanism of frataxin function and oligomerization. Here, using small-angle x-ray scattering and x-ray crystallography, we describe the solution structure of the oligomers formed during the iron-dependent assembly of yeast (Yfh1) and Escherichia coli (CyaY) frataxin. At an iron-to-protein ratio of 2, the initially monomeric Yfh1 is converted to a trimeric form in solution. The trimer in turn serves as the assembly unit for higher order oligomers induced at higher iron-to-protein ratios. The x-ray crystallographic structure obtained from iron-soaked crystals demonstrates that iron binds at the trimer-trimer interaction sites, presumably contributing to oligomer stabilization. For the ferroxidation-deficient D79A/D82A variant of Yfh1, iron-dependent oligomerization may still take place, although >50% of the protein is found in the monomeric state at the highest iron-to-protein ratio used. This demonstrates that the ferroxidation reaction controls frataxin assembly and presumably the iron chaperone function of frataxin and its interactions with target proteins. For E. coli CyaY, the assembly unit of higher order oligomers is a tetramer, which could be an effect of the much shorter N-terminal region of this protein. The results show that understanding of the mechanistic features of frataxin function requires detailed knowledge of the interplay between the ferroxidation reaction, iron-induced oligomerization, and the structure of oligomers formed during assembly.  相似文献   

10.
Yeast cells deficient in the yeast frataxin homolog (Yfh1p) accumulate iron in their mitochondria. Whether this iron is toxic, however, remains unclear. We showed that large excesses of iron in the growth medium did not inhibit growth and did not decrease cell viability. Increasing the ratio of mitochondrial iron-to-Yfh1p by decreasing the steady-state level of Yfh1p to less than 100 molecules per cell had very few deleterious effects on cell physiology, even though the mitochondrial iron concentration greatly exceeded the iron-binding capacity of Yfh1p in these conditions. Mössbauer spectroscopy and FPLC analyses of whole mitochondria or of isolated mitochondrial matrices showed that the chemical and biochemical forms of the accumulated iron in mitochondria of mutant yeast strains (Δyfh1, Δggc1 and Δssq1) displayed a nearly identical distribution. This was also the case for Δggc1 cells, in which Yfh1p was overproduced. In these mitochondria, most of the iron was insoluble, and the ratio of soluble-to-insoluble iron did not change when the amount of Yfh1p was increased up to 4500 molecules per cell. Our results do not privilege the hypothesis of Yfh1p being an iron storage protein in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive degenerative disorder caused in the vast majority of cases by a GAA triplet expansion in the FRDA gene on chromosome 9q13. The FRDA gene product, frataxin, is a widely expressed mitochondrial protein which is severely reduced in FRDA patients. Loss of the homologue of frataxin in yeast is associated with mitochondrial iron overload, increased sensitivity to oxidative stress and profound deficit of oxidative phosphorylation. The demonstration that the human pathology of FRDA is also characterised by mitochondrial iron accumulation, deficit of respiratory chain complex activities and in vivo deficit of tissue energy metabolism establishes FRDA as a 'new' nuclear encoded mitochondrial disease.  相似文献   

12.
F Foury 《FEBS letters》1999,456(2):281-284
Deletion of the yeast frataxin homologue, YFH1, elicits accumulation of iron in mitochondria and mitochondrial defects. We report here that in the presence of an iron chelator in the culture medium, the concentration of iron in mitochondria is the same in wild-type and YFH1 deletant strains. Under these conditions, the activity of the respiratory complexes is restored. However, the activity of the mitochondrial aconitase, a 4Fe-4S cluster-containing protein, remains low. The frataxin family bears homology to a bacterial protein family which confers resistance to tellurium, a metal closely related to sulfur. Yfh1p might control the synthesis of iron-sulfur clusters in mitochondria.  相似文献   

13.
Yeast Mrs3p and Mrs4p are evolutionarily conserved mitochondrial carrier proteins that transport iron into mitochondria under some conditions. Yeast frataxin (Yfh1p), the homolog of the human protein implicated in Friedreich ataxia, is involved in iron homeostasis. However, its precise functions are controversial. Anaerobically grown triple mutant cells (Deltamrs3/4/Deltayfh1) displayed a severe growth defect corrected by in vivo iron supplementation. Because anaerobically grown cells do not synthesize heme, and they do not experience oxidative stress, this growth defect was most likely due to Fe-S cluster deficiency. Fe-S cluster formation was assessed in anaerobically grown cells shifted to air for a brief period. In isolated mitochondria, Fe-S clusters were detected on newly imported yeast ferredoxin precursor and on endogenous aconitase by means of [35S]cysteine labeling and native gel separation. New cluster formation was dependent on iron addition to mitochondria, and the iron concentration dependence was shifted dramatically upward in the Deltamrs3/4 mutant, indicating a role of Mrs3/4p in iron transport. The frataxin mutant strain lacked protein import capacity because of low mitochondrial membrane potential, although this was partially restored by growth in the presence of high iron. Under these conditions, a kinetic defect in new Fe-S cluster formation was still noted. Import of frataxin into frataxin-minus isolated mitochondria promptly corrected the Fe-S cluster assembly defect without further iron addition. These findings show that Mrs3/4p transports iron into mitochondria, whereas frataxin makes iron already within mitochondria available for Fe-S cluster synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), a progressive neurodegenerative disease, is due to the partial loss of function of frataxin, a mitochondrial protein of unknown function. Loss of frataxin causes mitochondrial iron accumulation, deficiency in the activities of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) proteins, and increased oxidative stress. Mouse models for FRDA demonstrate that the Fe-S deficit precedes iron accumulation, suggesting that iron accumulation is a secondary event. Furthermore, increased oxidative stress in FRDA patients has been demonstrated, and in vitro experiments imply that the frataxin defect impairs early antioxidant defenses. These results taken together suggest that frataxin may function either in mitochondrial iron homeostasis, in Fe-S cluster biogenesis, or directly in the response to oxidative stress. It is clear, however, that the pathogenic mechanism in FRDA involves free-radical production and oxidative stress, a process that appears to be sensitive to antioxidant therapies.  相似文献   

15.
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) results from cellular damage caused by a deficiency in the mitochondrial matrix protein frataxin. To address the effect of frataxin deficiency on mitochondrial iron chemistry, the heavy mitochondrial fraction (HMF) was isolated from primary fibroblasts from FRDA affected and unaffected individuals. X-ray absorption spectroscopy was used to characterize the chemical form of iron. Near K-edge spectra were fitted with a series of model iron compounds to determine the proportion of each iron species. Most of the iron in both affected and unaffected fibroblasts was ferrihydrite. The iron K-edge from unaffected HMFs were best fitted with poorly organized ferrihydrite modeled by frataxin whereas HMFs from affected cells were best fitted with highly organized ferrihydrite modeled by ferritin. Both had several minor iron species but these did not differ consistently with disease. Since the iron K-edge spectra of ferritin and frataxin are very similar, we present additional evidence for the presence of ferritin-bound iron in HMF. The predominant ferritin subunit in HMFs from affected cells resembled mitochondrial ferritin (MtFt) in size and antigenicity. Western blotting of native gels showed that HMF from affected cells had 3-fold more holoferritin containing stainable iron. We conclude that most of the iron in fibroblast HMF from both affected and unaffected cells is ferrihydrite but only FRDA affected cells mineralize significant iron in mitochondrial ferritin.  相似文献   

16.
BackgroundFriedreich's ataxia results from a decreased expression of the nuclear gene encoding the mitochondrial protein, frataxin. Frataxin participates in the biosynthesis of iron-sulfur clusters and heme cofactors, as well as in iron storage and protection against oxidative stress. How frataxin interacts with the antioxidant defence components is poorly understood.MethodsTherefore, we have investigated by kinetic, thermodynamic and modelling approaches the molecular interactions between yeast frataxin (Yfh1) and superoxide dismutases, Sod1 and Sod2, and the influence of Yfh1 on their enzymatic activities.ResultsYfh1 interacts with cytosolic Sod1 with a dissociation constant, Kd = 1.3 ± 0.3 μM, in two kinetic steps. The first step occurs in the 200 ms range and corresponds to the Yfh1-Sod1 interaction, whereas the second is slow and is assumed to be a change in the conformation of the protein-protein adduct. Furthermore, computational investigations confirm the stability of the Yfh1-Sod1 complex. Yfh1 forms two protein complexes with mitochondrial Sod2 with 1:1 and 2:1 Yfh1/Sod2 stoichiometry (Kd1 = 1.05 ± 0.05 and Kd2 = 6.6 ± 0.1 μM). Furthermore, Yfh1 increases the enzymatic activity of Sod1 while slightly affecting that of Sod2. Finally, the stabilities of the protein-protein adducts and the effect of Yfh1 on superoxide dismutase activities depend on the nature of the mitochondrial metal.ConclusionsThis work confirms the participation of Yfh1 in cellular defence against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial biosynthesis of iron-sulfur clusters (ISCs) is a vital process involving the delivery of elemental iron and sulfur to a scaffold protein via molecular interactions that are still poorly defined. Analysis of highly conserved components of the yeast ISC assembly machinery shows that the iron-chaperone, Yfh1, and the sulfur-donor complex, Nfs1-Isd11, directly bind to each other. This interaction is mediated by direct Yfh1-Isd11 contacts. Moreover, both Yfh1 and Nfs1-Isd11 can directly bind to the scaffold, Isu1. Binding of Yfh1 to Nfs1-Isd11 or Isu1 requires oligomerization of Yfh1 and can occur in an iron-independent manner. However, more stable contacts are formed when Yfh1 oligomerization is normally coupled with the binding and oxidation of Fe2+. Our observations challenge the view that iron delivery for ISC synthesis is mediated by Fe2+-loaded monomeric Yfh1. Rather, we find that the iron oxidation-driven oligomerization of Yfh1 promotes the assembly of stable multicomponent complexes in which the iron donor and the sulfur donor simultaneously interact with each other as well as with the scaffold. Moreover, the ability to store ferric iron enables oligomeric Yfh1 to adjust iron release depending on the presence of Isu1 and the availability of elemental sulfur and reducing equivalents. In contrast, the use of anaerobic conditions that prevent Yfh1 oligomerization results in inhibition of ISC assembly on Isu1. These findings suggest that iron-dependent oligomerization is a mechanism by which the iron donor promotes assembly of the core machinery for mitochondrial ISC synthesis.ISC3 biosynthesis is an essential function that eukaryotic cells initiate in mitochondria and probably other cellular compartments using three core components: a sulfur donor, an iron donor, and an ISC assembly scaffold (1, 2). In yeast mitochondria, the cysteine-desulfurase, Nfs1, and the iron-chaperone, Yfh1, are believed to provide sulfur and iron, respectively, for ISC assembly on the Isu1 scaffold (1), whereas the Nfs1-binding protein, Isd11, has been shown to stabilize Nfs1 (3). These components are highly conserved and the human orthologues of Yfh1 (frataxin), Isu1 (ISCU), and Isd11 (ISD11) are implicated in the etiology of severe disorders including Friedreich ataxia and mitochondrial myopathy (4).Previous studies have underscored the complexity of the interactions among eukaryotic ISC assembly components as well as their metal dependence. Supplementation of mitochondrial lysates with Fe2+ under aerobic conditions led to co-isolation of Yfh1 and Isu1 along with Nfs1 and Isd11 by pulldown or immunoprecipitation assays (57). Furthermore, aerobic preincubation of histidine-tagged Yfh1 monomer with Fe2+ enabled Isu1 to be pulled down by Yfh1 in the absence of other proteins (5). These studies have led to the current view that iron delivery for yeast ISC synthesis involves direct contacts between iron-loaded monomeric Yfh1 and Isu1 (57). Although Yfh1 oligomerization is normally coupled with iron binding, oxidation, and storage (5, 8), the possibility that Isu1 might also interact with oligomeric Yfh1 has remained largely unexplored.Similar to Yfh1, human frataxin was found to interact with multiple ISC assembly components in human cells; however, in this case immunoprecipitation data suggested that frataxin binds to ISCU indirectly, via nickel-dependent contacts with ISD11 (9). Whether direct interactions occur between Yfh1 and Isd11 has not yet been examined.While previous studies focused primarily on Yfh1-Isu1 and frataxin-ISD11 interactions, it is likely that the coordinate delivery of potentially toxic sulfur and iron to Isu1/ISCU involves multiple close interactions whereby the sulfur donor and the iron donor simultaneously interact with each other and with the ISC scaffold, as proposed for prokaryotic ISC assembly (10). However, it is currently unknown whether monomeric Yfh1/frataxin may form direct contacts with more than one partner, and the structure of the eukaryotic ISC assembly machinery is completely undefined. We show that iron oxidation-dependent oligomerization enables Yfh1 to have simultaneous direct interactions with Nfs1-Isd11 and Isu1. Our data provide insights about the sequence of events and the molecular architecture required for the initial step in mitochondrial ISC assembly.  相似文献   

18.
The mitochondrial solute carriers Mrs3p and Mrs4p were originally isolated as multicopy suppressors of intron splicing defects. We show here that MRS4 is co-regulated with the iron regulon genes, and up-regulated in a strain deficient for Yfh1p, the yeast homologue of human frataxin. Using in vivo 55Fe cell radiolabeling we show that in glucose-grown cells mitochondrial iron accumulation is 5-15 times higher in deltaYFH1 than in wild-type strain. However, although in a deltaYFH1deltaMRS3deltaMRS4 strain, the intracellular 55Fe content is extremely high, the mitochondrial iron concentration is decreased to almost wild-type levels. Moreover, deltaYFH1deltaMRS3deltaMRS4 cells grown in high iron media do not lose their mitochondrial genome. Conversely, a deltaYFH1 strain overexpressing MRS4 has an increased mitochondrial iron content and no mitochondrial genome. Therefore, MRS4 is required for mitochondrial iron accumulation in deltaYFH1 cells. Expression of the iron regulon and intracellular 55Fe content are higher in a deltaMRS3deltaMRS4 strain than in the wild type. Nevertheless, the mitochondrial 55Fe content, a balance between iron uptake and exit, is decreased by a factor of two. Moreover, 55Fe incorporation into heme by ferrochelatase is increased in an MRS4-overexpressing strain. The function of MRS4 in iron import into mitochondria is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is caused by low expression of frataxin, a small mitochondrial protein. Studies with both yeast and mammals have suggested that decreased frataxin levels lead to elevated intramitochondrial concentrations of labile (chelatable) iron, and consequently to oxidative mitochondrial damage. Here, we used the mitochondrion-selective fluorescent iron indicator/chelator rhodamine B-[(1,10-phenanthrolin-5-yl)aminocarbonyl]benzylester (RPA) to determine the mitochondrial chelatable iron of FRDA patient lymphoblast and fibroblast cell lines, in comparison with age- and sex-matched control cells. No alteration in the concentration of mitochondrial chelatable iron could be observed in patient cells, despite strongly decreased frataxin levels. Uptake studies with (55)Fe-transferrin and iron loading with ferric ammonium citrate revealed no significant differences in transferrin receptor density and iron responsive protein/iron regulatory element binding activity between patients and controls. However, sensitivity to H(2)O(2) was significantly increased in patient cells, and H(2)O(2) toxicity could be completely inhibited by the ubiquitously distributing iron chelator 2,2'-dipyridyl, but not by the mitochondrion-selective chelator RPA. Our data strongly suggest that frataxin deficiency does not affect the mitochondrial labile iron pool or other parameters of cellular iron metabolism and suggest a decreased antioxidative defense against extramitochondrial iron-derived radicals in patient cells. These results challenge current concepts favoring the use of mitochondrion-specific iron chelators and antioxidants to treat FRDA.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated the mechanism of frataxin, a conserved mitochondrial protein involved in iron metabolism and neurodegenerative disease. Previous studies revealed that the yeast frataxin homologue (mYfh1p) is activated by Fe(II) in the presence of O2 and assembles stepwise into a 48-subunit multimer (alpha48) that sequesters >2000 atoms of iron in 2-4-nm cores structurally similar to ferritin iron cores. Here we show that mYfh1p assembly is driven by two sequential iron oxidation reactions: A ferroxidase reaction catalyzed by mYfh1p induces the first assembly step (alpha --> alpha3), followed by a slower autoxidation reaction that promotes the assembly of higher order oligomers yielding alpha48. Depending on the ionic environment, stepwise assembly is associated with accumulation of 50-75 Fe(II)/subunit. Initially, this Fe(II) is loosely bound to mYfh1p and can be readily mobilized by chelators or made available to the mitochondrial enzyme ferrochelatase to synthesize heme. Transfer of mYfh1p-bound Fe(II) to ferrochelatase occurs in the presence of citrate, a physiologic ferrous iron chelator, suggesting that the transfer involves an intermolecular interaction. If mYfh1p-bound Fe(II) is not transferred to a ligand, iron oxidation, and mineralization proceed to completion, Fe(III) becomes progressively less accessible, and a stable iron-protein complex is formed. Iron oxidation-driven stepwise assembly is a novel mechanism by which yeast frataxin can function as an iron chaperone or an iron store.  相似文献   

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