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1.
Ferroportin (Fpn), a ferrous iron Fe(II) transporter responsible for the entry of iron into plasma, is regulated post-translationally through internalization and degradation following binding of the hormone hepcidin. Cellular iron export is impaired in mice and humans with aceruloplasminemia, an iron overload disease due to mutations in the ferroxidase ceruloplasmin (Cp). In the absence of Cp Fpn is rapidly internalized and degraded. Depletion of extracellular Fe(II) by the yeast ferroxidase Fet3p or iron chelators can maintain cell surface Fpn in the absence of Cp. Iron remains bound to Fpn in the absence of multicopper oxidases. Fpn with bound iron is recognized by a ubiquitin ligase, which ubiquitinates Fpn on lysine 253. Mutation of lysine 253 to alanine prevents ubiquitination and maintains Fpn-iron on cell surface in the absence of ferroxidase activity. The requirement for a ferroxidase to maintain iron transport activity represents a new mechanism of regulating cellular iron export, a new function for Cp and an explanation for brain iron overload in patients with aceruloplasminemia.  相似文献   

2.
Hephaestin is a multicopper ferroxidase involved in iron absorption in the small intestine. Expressed mainly on the basolateral surface of duodenal enterocytes, hephaestin facilitates the export of iron from the intestinal epithelium into blood by oxidizing Fe(2+) into Fe(3+), the only form of iron bound by the plasma protein transferrin. Structurally, the human hephaestin ectodomain is predicted to resemble ceruloplasmin, the major multicopper oxidase in blood. In addition to its ferroxidase activity, ceruloplasmin was reported to oxidize a wide range of organic compounds including a group of physiologically relevant substrates (biogenic amines). To study oxidation of organic substrates, the human hephaestin ectodomain was expressed in Pichia pastoris. The purified recombinant hephaestin has an average copper content of 4.2 copper atoms per molecule. The K(m) for Fe(2+) of hephaestin was determined to be 3.2μM which is consistent with the K(m) values for other multicopper ferroxidases. In addition, the K(m) values of hephaestin for such organic substrates as p-phenylenediamine and o-dianisidine are close to values determined for ceruloplasmin. However, in contrast to ceruloplasmin, hephaestin was incapable of direct oxidation of adrenaline and dopamine implying a difference in biological substrate specificities between these two homologous ferroxidases.  相似文献   

3.
Hephaestin (Hp) is a trans-membrane protein, which plays a critical role in intestinal iron absorption. Hp was originally identified as the gene responsible for the phenotype of sex-linked anaemia in the sla mouse. The mutation in the sla protein causes accumulation of dietary iron in duodenal cells, causing severe microcytic hypochromic anaemia. Although mucosal uptake of dietary iron is normal, export from the duodenum is inhibited. Hp is homologous to ceruloplasmin (Cp), a member of the family of multi copper ferroxidases (MCFs) and possesses ferroxidase activity that facilitates iron release from the duodenum and load onto the serum iron transport protein transferrin. In the present study, attempts were made to produce biologically active recombinant mouse hephaestin as a secretory form tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP), Hpsec-GFP. Plasmid expressing Hpsec-GFP was constructed and transfected into COS and CHO cells. The GFP aided the monitoring expression in real time to select the best conditions to maximise expression and provided a tag for purifying and analysing Hpsec-GFP. The protein had detectable oxidase activity as shown by in-gel and solution-based assays. The methods described here can provide the basis for further work to probe the interaction of hephaestin with other proteins using complementary fluorescent tags on target proteins that would facilitate the fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements, for example with transferrin or colocalisation studies, and help to discover more about hephaestin works at the molecular level.  相似文献   

4.
《Phytochemistry》1986,25(6):1281-1283
Mushroom tyrosinase catalyses the oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III). Both the newly-discovered ferroxidase and the well-characterized diphenol oxidase activities of tyrosinase exhibit inhibition by cyanide and both activities co-purify during two preparation steps. The characteristics of tyrosinase-catalysed Fe(II) oxidation are compared with those of other ferroxidases.  相似文献   

5.
Release of iron from enterocytes and hepatocytes is thought to require the copper-dependent ferroxidase activity of hephaestin (Hp) and ceruloplasmin (Cp), respectively. In swine, copper deficiency (CD) impairs iron absorption, but whether this occurs in rats is unclear. By feeding a diet deficient in copper, CD was produced, as evidenced by the loss of copper-dependent plasma ferroxidase I activity, and in enterocytes, CD reduced copper levels and copper-dependent oxidase activity. Hematocrit was reduced, and liver iron was doubled. CD reduced duodenal mucosal iron and ferritin, whereas CD increased iron absorption. Duodenal mucosal DMT1-IRE and ferroportin1 expression remained constant with CD. When absorption in CD rats was compared with that seen normally and in iron-deficient anemic animals, strong correlations were found among mucosal iron, ferritin, and iron absorption, suggesting that the level of iron absorption was appropriate given that the erythroid and stores stimulators of iron absorption are opposed in CD. Because CD reduced the activity of Cp, as evidenced by copper-dependent plasma ferroxidase I activity and hepatocyte iron accumulation, but iron absorption increased, it is unlikely that the ferroxidase activity of Hp is important and suggests another function for this protein in the export of iron from the enterocyte during iron absorption. Also, the copper-dependent ferroxidase activity of Cp does not appear important for iron efflux from macrophages, because Kupffer cells of the liver and nonheme iron levels of the spleen were normal during copper deficiency, suggesting another role for Cp in these cells.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of various forms of lactoferrin (Lf) interacting with ceruloplasmin (Cp, ferro-O2-oxidoreductase, EC 1.16.3.1) on oxidase activity of the latter were studied. Comparing the incorporation of Fe3+ oxidized by Cp into Lf and serum transferrin (Tf) showed that at pH 5.5 apo-Lf binds the oxidized iron seven times and at pH 7.4 four times faster than apo-Tf under the same conditions. Apo-Lf increased the oxidation rate of Fe2+ by Cp 1.25 times when Cp/Lf ratio was 1 : 1. Lf saturated with Fe3+ or Cu2+ increased the oxidation rate of iron 1.6 and 2 times when Cp to holo-Lf ratios were 1 : 1 and 1 : 2, respectively. Upon adding to Cp the excess amounts of apo-Lf (Cp/apo-Lf < 1 : 1) or of holo-Lf (Cp/holo-Lf < 1 : 2) the oxidation rate of iron no longer changed. Complex Cp-Lf demonstrating ferroxidase activity was discovered in breast milk.  相似文献   

7.
铜是人体必需的微量元素,参与体内多种蛋白和酶的组成,机体内存在严格的铜稳态调控机制。作为血浆中最主要的多铜亚铁氧化酶——铜蓝蛋白,与另外两种同源亚铁氧化酶——膜铁转运辅助蛋白和zyklopen,共同参与体内铁的转运,维持铁代谢的平衡。将对调节铜和铁平衡的重要意义以及铜和铁在机体代谢过程中的相互作用、发展动态进行讨论。  相似文献   

8.
9.
Ferroxidases are essential for normal iron homeostasis in most organisms. The paralogous vertebrate ferroxidases ceruloplasmin (Cp) and hephaestin (Heph) are considered to have nonidentical functions in iron transport: plasma Cp drives iron transport from tissue stores while intestinal Heph facilitates iron absorption from the intestinal lumen. To clarify the function of Cp, we acutely bled Cp-/- mice to stress iron homeostasis pathways. Red cell hemoglobin recovery was defective in stressed Cp-/- mice, consistent with low iron availability. Contrary to expectations, iron was freely released from spleen and liver stores in Cp-/- mice, but intestinal iron absorption was markedly impaired. Phlebotomy of wild-type mice caused a striking shift of Cp from the duodenal epithelium to the underlying lamina propria, suggesting a critical function of Cp in basolateral iron transport. Regulated relocalization of intestinal Cp may represent a fail-safe mechanism in which Cp shares with Heph responsibility for iron absorption under stress.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Apoferritin catalyzes the oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III). Ferroxidase activity is assayed and characterized by coupling the oxidation with the binding of Fe(III) to transferrin. The initial rate of Fe(II) oxidation is dependent on apoferritin and initial Fe(II) concentration but independent of transferrin concentration. The ferroxidase activity is inhibited by Zn(II). Ferritins with varying loads of iron have the same ferroxidase activity level. It is suggested that the described oxidation process represents the initial step of iron deposition in apoferritin. Since transferrin can intercept Fe(III) before it is deposited in apoferritin, active sites for Fe(II) oxidation must be on or near the surface of apoferritin. This finding is contrary to the current view of apoferritin-catalyzed oxidation of Fe(II) which places active sites in the channels to the core or inside the central core.  相似文献   

12.
The catalytic activity of phosvitin in Fe(II) oxidation and the addition of iron to transferrin were studied under various conditions. It was concluded that the Fe(II) oxidized by phosvitin would bind to apotransferrin, although an appreciable fraction of Fe(III) remained bound to phosvitin. Fe(III) also migrated from phosvitin to apotransferrin. This reaction was first-order with respect to Fe(III)-phosvitin concentration with a half-time (t1/2) of 10 min, and a first-order rate constant, k=0.069min-1, in 700 muM-phosphate buffer, pH 7.2, at 30 degrees C. The catalysis of the oxidation of Fe(III) by phosvitin was proportional to O2 concentration, and is quite different from the relative O2 independence of Fe(II) oxidation as catalysed by ferroxidase. A scheme for the mobilization and transfer of iron in the chicken, including the role of ferroxidase, phosyitin and transferrin, is presented.  相似文献   

13.
The ubiquitous 24-meric iron-storage protein ferritin and multicopper oxidases such as ceruloplasmin or hephaestin catalyze oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III), using molecular oxygen as oxidant. The ferroxidase activity of these proteins is essential for cellular iron homeostasis. It has been reported that the amyloid precursor protein (APP) also has ferroxidase activity. The activity is assigned to a ferroxidase site in the E2 domain of APP. A synthetic 22-residue peptide that carries the putative ferroxidase site of E2 domain (FD1 peptide) has been claimed to encompass the same activity. We previously tested the ferroxidase activity of the synthetic FD1 peptide but we did not observe any activity above the background oxidation of Fe(II) by molecular oxygen. Here we used isothermal titration calorimetry to study Zn(II) and Fe(II) binding to the natural E2 domain of APP, and we employed the transferrin assay and oxygen consumption measurements to test the ferroxidase activity of the E2 domain. We found that this domain neither in the presence nor in the absence of the E1 domain binds Fe(II) and it is not able to catalyze the oxidation of Fe(II). Binding of Cu(II) to the E2 domain did not induce ferroxidase activity contrary to the presence of redox active Cu(II) centers in ceruloplasmin or hephaestin. Thus, we conclude that E2 or E1 domains of APP do not have ferroxidase activity and that the potential involvement of APP as a ferroxidase in the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease must be re-evaluated.  相似文献   

14.
Ferritin plays an important role in iron metabolism and our aim is to understand the mechanisms by which iron is sequestered within its protein shell as the mineral ferrihydrite. We present M?ssbauer spectroscopic data on recombinant human and horse spleen ferritin from which we draw the following conclusions: (1) that apoferritin catalyses Fe(II) oxidation as a first step in ferrihydrite deposition, (2) that the catalysis of Fe(II) oxidation is associated with residues situated within H chains, at the postulated 'ferroxidase centre' and not in the 3-fold inter-subunit channels previously suggested as the initial Fe(II) binding and oxidation site; (3) that both isolated Fe(III) and Fe(III) mu-oxo-bridged dimers found previously by M?ssbauer spectroscopy to be intermediates in iron-core formation in horse spleen ferritin, are located on H chains; and (4) that these dimers form at ferroxidase centres. The importance of the ferroxidase centre is suggested by the conservation of its ligands in many ferritins from vertebrates, invertebrates and plants. Nevertheless iron-core formation does occur in those ferritins that lack ferroxidase centres even though the initial Fe(II) oxidation is relatively slow. We compare the early stages of core formation in such variants and in horse spleen ferritin in which only 10-15% of its chains are of the H type. We discuss our findings in relation to the physiological role of isoferritins in iron storage processes.  相似文献   

15.
Iron metabolism in mammals requires a complex and tightly regulated molecular network. The classical view of iron metabolism has been challenged over the past ten years by the discovery of several new proteins, mostly Fe (II) iron transporters, enzymes with ferro-oxydase (hephaestin or ceruloplasmin) or ferri-reductase (Dcytb) activity or regulatory proteins like HFE and hepcidin. Furthermore, a new transferrin receptor has been identified, mostly expressed in the liver, and the ability of the megalin-cubilin complex to internalise the urinary Fe (III)-transferrin complex in renal tubular cells has been highlighted. Intestinal iron absorption by mature duodenal enterocytes requires Fe (III) iron reduction by Dcytb and Fe (II) iron transport through apical membranes by the iron transporter Nramp2/DMT1. This is followed by iron transfer to the baso-lateral side, export by ferroportin and oxidation into Fe (III) by hephaestin prior to binding to plasma transferrin. Macrophages play also an important role in iron delivery to plasma transferrin through phagocytosis of senescent red blood cell, heme catabolism and recycling of iron. Iron egress from macrophages is probably also mediated by ferroportin and patients with heterozygous ferroportin mutations develop progressive iron overload in liver macrophages. Iron homeostasis at the level of the organism is based on a tight control of intestinal iron absorption and efficient recycling of iron by macrophages. Signalling between iron stores in the liver and both duodenal enterocytes and macrophages is mediated by hepcidin, a circulating peptide synthesized by the liver and secreted into the plasma. Hepcidin expression is stimulated in response to iron overload or inflammation, and down regulated by anemia and hypoxia. Hepcidin deficiency leads to iron overload and hepcidin overexpression to anemia. Hepcidin synthesis in response to iron overload seems to be controlled by the HFE molecule. Patients with hereditary hemochromatosis due to HFE mutation have impaired hepcidin synthesis and forced expression of an hepcidin transgene in HFE deficient mice prevents iron overload. These results open new therapeutic perspectives, especially with the possibility to use hepcidin or antagonists for the treatment of iron overload disorders.  相似文献   

16.
The hollow sphere-shaped 24-meric ferritin can store large amounts of iron as a ferrihydrite-like mineral core. In all subunits of homomeric ferritins and in catalytically active subunits of heteromeric ferritins a diiron binding site is found that is commonly addressed as the ferroxidase center (FC). The FC is involved in the catalytic Fe(II) oxidation by the protein; however, structural differences among different ferritins may be linked to different mechanisms of iron oxidation. Non-heme ferritins are generally believed to operate by the so-called substrate FC model in which the FC cycles by filling with Fe(II), oxidizing the iron, and donating labile Fe(III)–O–Fe(III) units to the cavity. In contrast, the heme-containing bacterial ferritin from Escherichia coli has been proposed to carry a stable FC that indirectly catalyzes Fe(II) oxidation by electron transfer from a core that oxidizes Fe(II). Here, we put forth yet another mechanism for the non-heme archaeal 24-meric ferritin from Pyrococcus furiosus in which a stable iron-containing FC acts as a catalytic center for the oxidation of Fe(II), which is subsequently transferred to a core that is not involved in Fe(II)-oxidation catalysis. The proposal is based on optical spectroscopy and steady-state kinetic measurements of iron oxidation and dioxygen consumption by apoferritin and by ferritin preloaded with different amounts of iron. Oxidation of the first 48 Fe(II) added to apoferritin is spectrally and kinetically different from subsequent iron oxidation and this is interpreted to reflect FC building followed by FC-catalyzed core formation.  相似文献   

17.
Ceruloplasmin (Cp) is a multicopper oxidase and the most abundant copper binding protein in vertebrate plasma. Loss of function mutations in humans or experimental deletion in mice result in iron overload consistent with a putative ferroxidase function. Prior work suggested plasma may contain multiple ferroxidases. Studies were conducted in Holtzman rats (Rattus norvegicus), albino mice (Mus musculus), Cp?/? mice, and adult humans (Homo sapiens) to investigate the copper–iron interaction. Dietary copper-deficient (CuD) rats and mice were produced using a modified AIN-76A diet. Results confirmed that o-dianisidine is a better substrate than paraphenylene diamine (PPD) for assessing diamine oxidase activity of Cp. Plasma from CuD rat dams and pups, and CuD and Cp?/? mice contained no detectable Cp diamine oxidase activity. Importantly, no ferroxidase activity was detectable for CuD rats, mice, or Cp?/? mice compared to robust activity for copper-adequate (CuA) rodent controls using western membrane assay. Immunoblot protocols detected major reductions (60–90%) in Cp protein in plasma of CuD rodents but no alteration in liver mRNA levels by qRT-PCR. Data are consistent with apo-Cp being less stable than holo-Cp. Further research is needed to explain normal plasma iron in CuD mice. Reduction in Cp is a sensitive biomarker for copper deficiency.  相似文献   

18.
Ferritins are ubiquitous iron mineralizing and storage proteins that play an important role in iron homeostasis. Although excess iron is stored in the cytoplasm, most of the metabolically active iron is processed in the mitochondria of the cell. Little is known about how these organelles regulate iron homeostasis and toxicity. The recently discovered human mitochondrial ferritin (MtF), unlike other mammalian ferritins, is a homopolymer of 24 subunits that has a high degree of sequence homology with human H-chain ferritin (HuHF). Parallel experiments with MtF and HuHF reported here reveal striking differences in their iron oxidation and hydrolysis chemistry despite their similar diFe ferroxidase centers. In contrast to HuHF, MtF does not regenerate its ferroxidase activity after oxidation of its initial complement of Fe(II) and generally has considerably slower ferroxidation and mineralization activities as well. MtF exhibits sigmoidal kinetics of mineralization more characteristic of an L-chain than an H-chain ferritin. Site-directed mutagenesis reveals that serine 144, a residue situated near the ferroxidase center in MtF but absent from HuHF, is one player in this impairment of activity. Additionally only one-half of the 24 ferroxidase centers of MtF are functional, further contributing to its lower activity. Stopped-flow absorption spectrometry of Fe(II) oxidation by O(2) in MtF shows the formation of a transient diiron(III) mu-peroxo species (lambda(max) = 650 nm) as observed in HuHF. Also, as for HuHF, minimal hydroxyl radical is produced during the oxidative deposition of iron in MtF using O(2) as the oxidant. However, the 2Fe(II) + H(2)O(2) detoxification reaction found in HuHF does not occur in MtF. The structural differences and the physiological implications of the unique iron oxidation properties of MtF are discussed in light of these results.  相似文献   

19.
Ferritin molecules contain 24 polypeptide chains folded as four-helix bundles and arranged as a hollow shell capable of storing up to 4500 Fe(III) atoms. H chains contain ferroxidase centres which lie within the bundle, about 12?Å (1.2?nm) from the outside surface and 8?Å from the inner surface of the protein shell. Catalysis of Fe(II) oxidation precedes storage of Fe(III) as ferrihydrite, with the formation of μ-oxo-bridged Fe(III) dimers as intermediates. Factors influencing the movement of μ-oxo-bridged Fe(III) from the ferroxidase centre to the ferritin cavity are uncertain. Assistance by small chelators is one possibility. The aim of this investigation was to determine whether iron at the dinuclear centres of three ferritins (human H chain homopolymer, HuHF, the non-haem ferritin of Escherichia coli, EcFTN, and horse spleen ferritin, HoSF) is accessible to chelators. Forty-eight Fe(II) atoms/molecule were added to the apoferritins followed, 2?min later, by the addition of chelator (1,10-phenanthroline, 2,2-bipyridine, desferrioxamine or 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde). Iron species were analysed by Mössbauer spectroscopy or visible absorbance. Competition between chelators and apoferritin for Fe(II) was also investigated. The main conclusions of the study are that: (1) dinuclear iron and iron in small iron-cores in HuHF and EcFTN is mobilisable by all four chelators; (2) the chelators penetrate the shell; (3) 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde is the most efficient in mobilising Fe(III) but the least successful in competing for Fe(II); (4) Fe(III) is more readily released from EcFTN than from HuHF; (5) 2,2′-bipyridine aids the movement of Fe(III) from ferroxidase centre to core.  相似文献   

20.
Fe(III) storage by ferritin is an essential process of the iron homeostasis machinery. It begins by translocation of Fe(II) from outside the hollow spherical shape structure of the protein, which is formed as the result of self-assembly of 24 subunits, to a di-iron binding site, the ferroxidase center, buried in the middle of each active subunit. The pathway of Fe(II) to the ferroxidase center has remained elusive, and the importance of self-assembly for the functioning of the ferroxidase center has not been investigated. Here we report spectroscopic and metal ion binding studies with a mutant of ferritin from Pyrococcus furiosus (PfFtn) in which self-assembly was abolished by a single amino acid substitution. We show that in this mutant metal ion binding to the ferroxidase center and Fe(II) oxidation at this site was obliterated. However, metal ion binding to a conserved third site (site C), which is located in the inner surface of each subunit in the vicinity of the ferroxidase center and is believed to be the path for Fe(II) to the ferroxidase center, was not disrupted. These results are the basis of a new model for Fe(II) translocation to the ferroxidase center: self-assembly creates channels that guide the Fe(II) ions toward the ferroxidase center directly through the protein shell and not via the internal cavity and site C. The results may be of significance for understanding the molecular basis of ferritin-related disorders such as neuroferritinopathy in which the 24-meric structure with 432 symmetry is distorted.  相似文献   

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