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1.
The structure and crystal chemical properties of iron cores of reconstituted recombinant human ferritins and their site-directed variants have been studied by transmission electron microscopy and electron diffraction. The kinetics of Fe uptake have been compared spectrophotometrically. Recombinant L and H-chain ferritins, and recombinant H-chain variants incorporating modifications in the threefold (Asp131----His or Glu134----Ala) and fourfold (Leu169----Arg) channels, at the partially buried ferroxidase sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly), a putative nucleation site on the inner surface (Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), and both the ferroxidase and nucleation sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly and Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), were investigated. An additional H-chain variant, incorporating substitution of the last ten C-terminal residues for those of the L-chain protein, was also studied. Most of the proteins assimilated iron to give discrete electron-dense cores of the Fe(III) hydrated oxide, ferrihydrite (Fe2O3.nH2O). No differences were observed for variants modified in the three- or fourfold channels compared with the unmodified H-chain ferritin. The recombinant L-chain ferritin and H-chain variant depleted of the ferroxidase site, however, showed markedly reduced uptake kinetics and comprised cores of increased diameter and regularity. Depletion of the inner surface Glu residues, whilst maintaining the ferroxidase site, resulted in a partially reduced rate of Fe uptake and iron cores of wider particle size distribution. Modification of both ferroxidase and inner surface Glu residues resulted in complete inhibition of iron uptake and deposition. No cores were observed by electron microscopy although negative staining showed that the protein shell was intact. The general requirement of an appropriate spatial charge density across the cavity surface rather than specific amino acid residues could explain how, in spite of an almost complete lack of identity between the amino acid sequences of bacterioferritin and mammalian ferritins, ferrihydrite is deposited within the cavity of both proteins under similar reconstitution conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Iron deposition within the iron storage protein ferritin involves a complex series of events consisting of Fe(2+) binding, transport, and oxidation at ferroxidase sites and mineralization of a hydrous ferric oxide core, the storage form of iron. In the present study, we have examined the thermodynamic properties of Fe(2+) binding to recombinant human H-chain apoferritin (HuHF) by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) in order to determine the location of the primary ferrous ion binding sites on the protein and the principal pathways by which the Fe(2+) travels to the dinuclear ferroxidase center prior to its oxidation to Fe(3+). Calorimetric titrations show that the ferroxidase center is the principal locus for Fe(2+) binding with weaker binding sites elsewhere on the protein and that one site of the ferroxidase center, likely the His65 containing A-site, preferentially binds Fe(2+). That only one site of the ferroxidase center is occupied by Fe(2+) implies that Fe(2+) oxidation to form diFe(III) species might occur in a stepwise fashion. In dilute anaerobic protein solution (3-5 microM), only 12 Fe(2+)/protein bind at pH 6.51 increasing to 24 Fe(2+)/protein at pH 7.04 and 7.5. Mutation of ferroxidase center residues (E62K+H65G) eliminates the binding of Fe(2+) to the center, a result confirming the importance of one or both Glu62 and His65 residues in Fe(2+) binding. The total Fe(2+) binding capacity of the protein is reduced in the 3-fold hydrophilic channel variant S14 (D131I+E134F), indicating that the primary avenue by which Fe(2+) gains access to the interior of ferritin is through these eight channels. The binding stoichiometry of the channel variant is one-third that of the recombinant wild-type H-chain ferritin whereas the enthalpy and association constant for Fe(2+) binding are similar for the two with an average values (DeltaH degrees = 7.82 kJ/mol, binding constant K = 1.48 x 10(5) M(-)(1) at pH 7.04). Since channel mutations do not completely prevent Fe(2+) binding to the ferroxidase center, iron gains access to the center in approximately one-third of the channel variant molecules by other pathways.  相似文献   

3.
Human ferritins sequester and store iron as a stable FeOOH((s)) mineral core within a protein shell assembled from 24 subunits of two types, H and L. Core mineralization in recombinant H- and L-subunit homopolymer and heteropolymer ferritins and several site-directed H-subunit variants was investigated to determine the iron oxidation/hydrolysis chemistry as a function of iron flux into the protein. Stopped-flow absorption spectrometry, UV spectrometry, and electrode oximetry revealed that the mineral core forms by at least three pathways, not two as previously thought. They correspond to the ferroxidase, mineral surface, and the Fe(II) + H2O2 detoxification reactions, respectively: [see reactions]. The H-subunit catalyzed ferroxidase reaction 1 occurs at all levels of iron loading of the protein but decreases with increasing iron added (48-800 Fe(II)/protein). Reaction 2 is the dominant reaction at 800 Fe(II)/protein, whereas reaction 3 occurs largely at intermediate iron loadings of 100-500 Fe(II)/protein. Some of the H2O2 produced in reaction 1 is consumed in the detoxification reaction 3; the 2/1 Fe(II)/H2O2 stoichiometry of reaction 3 minimizes hydroxyl radical production during mineralization. Human L-chain ferritin and H-chain variants lacking functional nucleation and/or ferroxidase sites deposit their iron largely through the mineral surface reaction 2. H2O2 is shown to be an intermediate product of dioxygen reduction in L-chain as well as in H-chain and H-chain variant ferritins.  相似文献   

4.
Zinc and terbium, inhibitors of iron incorporation in the ferritins, have been used for many years as probes of structure-function relationships in these proteins. Isothermal titration calorimetric and kinetic measurements of Zn(II) and Tb(III) binding and inhibition of Fe(II) oxidation were used to identify and characterize thermodynamically ( n, K, Delta H degrees, Delta S degrees, and Delta G degrees ) the functionally important binding sites for these metal ions in recombinant human H-chain, L-chain, and H-chain site-directed variant ferritins. The data reveal at least two classes of binding sites for both Zn(II) and Tb(III) in human H-chain ferritin: one strong, corresponding to binding of one metal ion in each of the eight three-fold channels, and the other weak, involving binding at the ferroxidase and nucleation sites of the protein as well as at other weak unidentified binding sites. Zn(II) and Tb(III) binding to recombinant L-chain ferritin showed similar stoichiometries for the strong binding sites within the channels, but fewer weaker binding sites when compared to the H-chain protein. The kinetics and binding data indicate that the binding of Zn(II) and Tb(III) in the three-fold channels, which is the main pathway of iron(II) entry in ferritin, blocks the access of most of the iron to the ferroxidase sites on the interior of the protein, accounting for the strong inhibition by these metal ions of the oxidative deposition of iron in ferritin.  相似文献   

5.
Iron uptake by the ubiquitous iron-storage protein ferritin involves the oxidation of two Fe(II) ions located at the highly conserved dinuclear “ferroxidase centre” in individual subunits. We have measured X-ray absorption spectra of four mutants (K86Q, K86Q/E27D, K86Q/E107D, and K86Q/E27D/E107D, involving variations of Glu to Asp on either or both sides of the dinuclear ferroxidase site) of recombinant human H-chain ferritin (rHuHF) in their complexes with reactive Fe(II) and redox-inactive Zn(II). The results for Fe–rHuHf are compared with those for recombinant Desulfovibrio desulfuricans bacterioferritin (DdBfr) in three states: oxidised, reduced, and oxidised/Chelex®-treated. The X-ray absorption near-edge region of the spectrum allows the oxidation state of the iron ions to be assessed. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure simulations have yielded accurate geometric information that represents an important refinement of the crystal structure of DdBfr; most metal–ligand bonds are shortened and there is a decrease in ionic radius going from the Fe(II) to the Fe(III) state. The Chelex®-treated sample is found to be partly mineralised, giving an indication of the state of iron in the cycled-oxidised (reduced, then oxidised) form of DdBfr, where the crystal structure shows the dinuclear site to be only half occupied. In the case of rHuHF the complexes with Zn(II) reveal a surprising similarity between the variants, indicating that the rHuHf dinuclear site is rigid. In spite of this, the rHuHf complexes with Fe(II) show a variation in reactivity that is reflected in the iron oxidation states and coordination geometries.  相似文献   

6.
Previous kinetics studies with homopolymer ferritins (bullfrog M-chain, human H-chain and Escherichia coli bacterial ferritins) have established that a mu-1,2-peroxo diferric intermediate is formed during Fe(II) oxidation by O2 at the ferroxidase site of the protein. The present study was undertaken to determine whether such an intermediate is formed also during iron oxidation in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF), a naturally occurring heteropolymer ferritin of H and L-subunits (approximately 3.3 H-chains/HoSF), and to assess its role in the formation of the mineral core. Multi-wavelength stopped-flow spectrophotometry of the oxidative deposition of iron in HoSF demonstrated that a transient peroxo complex (lambda(max) approximately 650 nm) is produced in this protein as for other ferritins. The peroxo complex in HoSF is formed about fourfold slower than in human H-chain (HuHF) and decays more slowly (approximately threefold) as well, at an iron level of two Fe(II)/H-chain. However, as found for HuHF, a second intermediate is formed in HoSF as a decay product of the peroxo complex. Only one-third of the expected peroxo complex forms at the ferroxidase centers of HoSF when two Fe(II)/H-subunits are added to the protein, dropping to only approximately 14% when 20 Fe(II)/H-chain are added, indicating a declining role of the peroxo complex in iron deposition. In contrast to HuHF, HoSF does not enzymatically regenerate the observable peroxo complex. The kinetics of mineralization in HoSF are modeled satisfactorily by a mechanism in which the ferroxidase site rapidly produces an incipient core from a single turnover of iron, upon which subsequent Fe(II) is oxidized autocatalytically to build the Fe(O)OH(s) mineral core. This model supports a role for the L-chain in iron mineralization and helps to explain the widespread occurrence of heteropolymer ferritins in tissues of vertebrates.  相似文献   

7.
The β-amyloid precursor protein (APP), which is a key player in Alzheimer's disease, was recently reported to possess an Fe(II) binding site within its E2 domain which exhibits ferroxidase activity [Duce et al. 2010, Cell 142: 857]. The putative ligands of this site were compared to those in the ferroxidase site of ferritin. The activity was indirectly measured using transferrin, which scavenges the Fe(III) product of the reaction. A 22-residue synthetic peptide, named FD1, with the putative ferroxidase site of APP, and the E2 domain of APP were each reported to exhibit 40% of the ferroxidase activity of APP and of ceruloplasmin. It was also claimed that the ferroxidase activity of APP is inhibited by Zn(II) just as in ferritin. We measured the ferroxidase activity indirectly (i) by the incorporation of the Fe(III) product of the ferroxidase reaction into transferrin and directly (ii) by monitoring consumption of the substrate molecular oxygen. The results with the FD1 peptide were compared to the established ferroxidase activities of human H-chain ferritin and of ceruloplasmin. For FD1 we observed no activity above the background of non-enzymatic Fe(II) oxidation by molecular oxygen. Zn(II) binds to transferrin and diminishes its Fe(III) incorporation capacity and rate but it does not specifically bind to a putative ferroxidase site of FD1. Based on these results, and on comparison of the putative ligands of the ferroxidase site of APP with those of ferritin, we conclude that the previously reported results for ferroxidase activity of FD1 and - by implication - of APP should be re-evaluated.  相似文献   

8.
Mineralization in Ferritin: An Efficient Means of Iron Storage   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Ferritins are a class of iron storage and mineralization proteins found throughout the animal, plant, and microbial kingdoms. Iron is stored within the protein shell of ferritin as a hydrous ferric oxide nanoparticle with a structure similar to that of the mineral "ferrihydrite." The eight hydrophilic channels that traverse the protein shell are thought to be the primary avenues by which iron gains entry to the interior of eukaryotic ferritins. Twenty-four subunits constitute the protein shell and, in mammalian ferritins, are of two types, H and L, which have complementary functions in iron uptake. The H chain contains a dinuclear ferroxidase site that is located within the four-helix bundle of the subunit; it catalyzes the oxidation of ferrous iron by O(2), producing H(2)O(2). The L subunit lacks this site but contains additional glutamate residues on the interior surface of the protein shell which produce a microenvironment that facilitates mineralization and the turnover of iron(III) at the H subunit ferroxidase site. Recent spectroscopic studies have shown that a di-Fe(III) peroxo intermediate is produced at the ferroxidase site followed by formation of a mu-oxobridged dimer, which then fragments and migrates to the nucleation sites to form incipient mineral core species. Once sufficient core has developed, iron oxidation and mineralization occur primarily on the surface of the growing crystallite, thus minimizing the production of potentially harmful H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

9.
Calculations to determine the electrostatic potential of the iron storage protein ferritin, using the human H-chain homopolymer (HuHF), reveal novel aspects of the protein. Some of the charge density correlates well with regions previously identified as active sites in the protein. The three-fold channels, the putative ferroxidase sites, and the nucleation sites all show expectedly negative values of the electrostatic potential. However, the outer entrance to the three-fold channels are surrounded by regions of positive potential, creating an electrostatic field directed toward the interior cavity. This electrostatic gradient provides a guidance mechanism for cations entering the protein cavity, indicating the three-fold channel as the major entrance to the protein. Pathways from the three-fold channels, indicated by electrostatic gradients on the inner surface, lead to the ferroxidase center, the nucleation center and to the interior entrance to the four-fold channel. Six glutamic acid residues at the nucleation site give rise to a region of very negative potential, surrounding a small positively charged center due to the presence of two conserved arginine residues, R63, in close proximity (4.9 A), suggesting that electrostatic fields could also play a role in the nucleation process. A large gradient in the electrostatic potential at the 4-fold channel gives rise to a field directed outward from the internal cavity, indicating the possibility that this channel functions to expel cations from inside the protein. The 4-fold channel could therefore provide an exit pathway for protons during mineralization, or iron leaving the protein cavity during de-mineralization.  相似文献   

10.
Ferritin from the marine pennate diatom Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries (PmFTN) plays a key role in sustaining growth in iron-limited ocean environments. The di-iron catalytic ferroxidase center of PmFTN (sites A and B) has a nearby third iron site (site C) in an arrangement typically observed in prokaryotic ferritins. Here we demonstrate that Glu-44, a site C ligand, and Glu-130, a residue that bridges iron bound at sites B and C, limit the rate of post-oxidation reorganization of iron coordination and the rate at which Fe3+ exits the ferroxidase center for storage within the mineral core. The latter, in particular, severely limits the overall rate of iron mineralization. Thus, the diatom ferritin is optimized for initial Fe2+ oxidation but not for mineralization, pointing to a role for this protein in buffering iron availability and facilitating iron-sparing rather than only long-term iron storage.  相似文献   

11.
The iron redox and hydrolysis chemistry of the ferritins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  

Background

Ferritins are ubiquitous and well-characterized iron storage and detoxification proteins. In bacteria and plants, ferritins are homopolymers composed of H-type subunits, while in vertebrates, they typically consist of 24 similar subunits of two types, H and L. The H-subunit is responsible for the rapid oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III) at a dinuclear center, whereas the L-subunit appears to help iron clearance from the ferroxidase center of the H-subunit and support iron nucleation and mineralization.

Scope of review

Despite their overall similar structures, ferritins from different origins markedly differ in their iron binding, oxidation, detoxification, and mineralization properties. This chapter provides a brief overview of the structure and function of ferritin, reviews our current knowledge of the process of iron uptake and mineral core formation, and highlights the similarities and differences of the iron oxidation and hydrolysis chemistry in a number of ferritins including those from archaea, bacteria, amphibians, and animals.

General Significance

Prokaryotic ferritins and ferritin-like proteins (Dps) appear to preferentially use H2O2 over O2 as the iron oxidant during ferritin core formation. While the product of iron oxidation at the ferroxidase centers of these and other ferritins is labile and is retained inside the protein cavity, the iron complex in the di-iron cofactor proteins is stable and remains at the catalytic site. Differences in the identity and affinity of the ferroxidase center ligands to iron have been suggested to influence the distinct reaction pathways in ferritins and the di-iron cofactor enzymes.

Major conclusions

The ferritin 3-fold channels are shown to be flexible structures that allow the entry and exit of different ions and molecules through the protein shell. The H- and L-subunits are shown to have complementary roles in iron oxidation and mineralization, and hydrogen peroxide appears to be a by-product of oxygen reduction at the FC of most ferritins. The di-iron(III) complex at the FC of some ferritins acts as a stable cofactor during iron oxidation rather than a catalytic center where Fe(II) is oxidized at the FC followed by its translocation to the protein cavity.  相似文献   

12.
To study the functional differences between human ferritin H- and L-chains and the role of the protein shell in the formation and growth of the ferritin iron core, we have compared the kinetics of iron oxidation and uptake of ferritin purified from human liver (90% L) and of the H-chain homopolymer overproduced in Escherichia coli (100% H). As a control for iron autocatalytic activity, we analyzed the effect of Fe(III) on the iron uptake reaction. The results show that the H-chain homopolymer has faster rates of iron uptake and iron oxidation than liver ferritin in all the conditions analyzed and that the difference is reduced in the conditions in which iron autocatalysis in high: i.e. at pH 7 and in presence of iron core. We have also analyzed the properties of two engineered H-chains, one lacking the last 22 amino acids at the carboxyl terminus and the other missing the first 13 residues at the amino terminus. These mutant proteins assemble in ferritin-like proteins and maintain the ability to catalyze iron oxidation. The deletion at the carboxyl terminus, however, prevents the formation of a stable iron core. It is concluded that the ferritin H-chain has an iron oxidation site which is separated from the sites of iron transfer and hydrolysis and that either the integrity of the molecule or the presence of the amino acid sequences forming the hydrophobic channel is necessary for iron core formation.  相似文献   

13.
Ferritins concentrate and store iron as a mineral in all bacterial, plant, and animal cells. The two ferritin subunit types, H or M (fast) and L (slow), differ in rates of iron uptake and mineralization and assemble in vivo to form heteropolymeric protein shells made up of 24 subunits; H/L subunit ratios reflect cell specificity of H and L subunit gene expression. A diferric peroxo species that is the initial reaction product of Fe(II) in H-type ferritins, as well as in ribonucleotide reductase (R2) and methane monooxygenase hydroxylase (MMOH), has recently been characterized, exploiting the relatively high accumulation of the peroxo intermediate in frog H-subunit type recombinant ferritin with the M sequence. The stability of the diferric reaction centers in R2 and MMOH contrasts with the instability of diferric centers in ferritin, which are precursors of the ferric mineral. We have determined the crystal structure of the homopolymer of recombinant frog M ferritin in two crystal forms: P4(1)2(1)2, a = b = 170.0 A and c = 481.5 A; and P3(1)21, a = b = 210.8 A and c = 328.1 A. The structural model for the trigonal form was refined to a crystallographic R value of 19.0% (Rfree = 19.4%); the two structures have an r.m.s.d. of approximately 0.22 A for all C alpha atoms. Comparison with the previously determined crystal structure of frog L ferritin indicates that the subunit interface at the molecular twofold axes is most variable, which may relate to the presence of the ferroxidase site in H-type ferritin subunits. Two metal ions (Mg) from the crystallization buffer were found in the ferroxidase site of the M ferritin crystals and interact with Glu23, Glu58, His61, Glu103, Gln137 and, unique to the M subunit, Asp140. The data suggest that Gln137 and Asp140 are a vestige of the second GluxxHis site, resulting from single nucleotide mutations of Glu and His codons and giving rise to Ala140 or Ser140 present in other eukaryotic H-type ferritins, by additional single nucleotide mutations. The observation of the Gln137xxAsp140 site in the frog M ferritin accounts for both the instability of the diferric oxy complexes in ferritin compared to MMOH and R2 and the observed kinetic variability of the diferric peroxo species in different H-type ferritin sequences.  相似文献   

14.
The human ferritin L-chain cDNA was cloned into a vector for overproduction in Escherichia coli, under the regulation of a lambda promoter. The plasmid obtained contains the full L-chain coding region modified at the first two codons. It is able to direct the synthesis of the L-chain which can constitute up to 15% of the total soluble protein of bacterial extract. The L-chains assemble to form a ferritin homopolymer with electrophoretic mobility, molecular weight, thermal stability, spectroscopic, and immunological properties analogous to natural ferritin from human liver (95% L-chain). This recombinant L-ferritin is able to incorporate and retain iron in solution at physiological pH values. At variance with the H-ferritin, the L form does not uptake iron at acidic pH values and does not show detectable ferroxidase activity. It is concluded that ferritin L-chain lacks the ferroxidase site present in the H-chain and that the two chains may have specialized functions in intracellular iron metabolism.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Ferritins are nearly ubiquitous iron storage proteins playing a fundamental role in iron metabolism. They are composed of 24 subunits forming a spherical protein shell encompassing a central iron storage cavity. The iron storage mechanism involves the initial binding and subsequent O2-dependent oxidation of two Fe2+ ions located at sites A and B within the highly conserved dinuclear "ferroxidase center" in individual subunits. Unlike animal ferritins and the heme-containing bacterioferritins, the Escherichia coli ferritin possesses an additional iron-binding site (site C) located on the inner surface of the protein shell close to the ferroxidase center. We report the structures of five E. coli ferritin variants and their Fe3+ and Zn2+ (a redox-stable alternative for Fe2+) derivatives. Single carboxyl ligand replacements in sites A, B, and C gave unique effects on metal binding, which explain the observed changes in Fe2+ oxidation rates. Binding of Fe2+ at both A and B sites is clearly essential for rapid Fe2+ oxidation, and the linking of FeB2+ to FeC2+ enables the oxidation of three Fe2+ ions. The transient binding of Fe2+ at one of three newly observed Zn2+ sites may allow the oxidation of four Fe2+ by one dioxygen molecule.  相似文献   

17.
Ferritins are ubiquitous iron storage proteins. Recently, we identified a novel metal-binding site, transit site, in the crystal structure of phytoferritin. To elucidate the function of the transit site in ferritin from other species, we prepared transit-site-deficient mutants of human H ferritin, E140A and E140Q, and their iron oxidation kinetics was analyzed. The initial velocities of iron oxidization were reduced in the variants, especially in E140Q. The crystal structure of E140Q showed that the side chain of the mutated Gln140 was fixed by a hydrogen bond, whereas that of native Glu140 was flexible. These results suggest that the conserved transit site also has a function to assist with the metal ion sequestration to the ferroxidase site in ferritins from vertebrates.  相似文献   

18.
Zhao G  Bou-Abdallah F  Yang X  Arosio P  Chasteen ND 《Biochemistry》2001,40(36):10832-10838
The ferritins are a class of iron storage and detoxification proteins that play a central role in the biological management of iron. These proteins have a catalytic site, "the ferroxidase site", located on the H-type subunit that facilitates the oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III) by O(2). Measurements during the past 10 years on a number of vertebrate ferritins have provided evidence that H(2)O(2) is produced at this diiron ferroxidase site. Recently reported experiments using three different analytical methods with horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) have failed to detect H(2)O(2) production in this protein [Lindsay, S., Brosnahan, D., and Watt, G. D. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 3340-3347]. These findings contrast with earlier results reporting H(2)O(2) production in HoSF [Xu, B., and Chasteen, N. D. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 19965-19970]. Here a sensitive fluorescence assay and an assay based on O(2) evolution in the presence of catalase were used to demonstrate that H(2)O(2) is produced in HoSF as previously reported. However, because of the relatively few H-chain ferroxidase sites in HoSF and the reaction of H(2)O(2) with the protein, H(2)O(2) is more difficult to detect in this ferritin than in recombinant human H-chain ferritin (HuHF). The proper sequence of addition of reagents is important for measurement of the total amount of H(2)O(2) produced during the ferroxidation reaction.  相似文献   

19.
During its metabolism, vanadium is known to become associated with the iron storage protein, ferritin. To elucidate probable vanadium binding sites on the protein, VO2+ binding to mammalian ferritins was studied using site-directed mutagenesis and EPR spectroscopy. VO2+-apoferritin EPR spectra of human H-chain (100% H), L-chain (100% L), horse spleen (84% L, 16% H) and sheep spleen (45% L, 55% H) ferritins revealed the presence of alpha and beta VO2+ species in all the proteins, implying that the ligands for these species are conserved between the H- and L-chains. The alpha species is less stable than the beta species and decreases with increasing pH, demonstrating that the two species are not pH-related, a result contrary to earlier proposals. EPR spectra of site-directed HuHF variants of several residues conserved in H- and L-chain ferritins (Asp-131, Glu-134, His-118 and His-128) suggest that His-118 near the outer opening of the three-fold channel is probably a ligand for VO2+ and is responsible for the beta signals in the EPR spectrum. The data indicate that VO2+ does not bind to the Asp-131 and Glu-134 residues within the three-fold channels nor does it bind at the ferroxidase site residues Glu-62 or His-65 or at the putative nucleation site residues Glu-61,64,67. While the ferroxidase site is not a site for VO2+ binding, mutation of residues Glu-62 and His-65 of this site to Ala affects VO2+ binding at His-118, located some 17 A away. Thus, VO2+ spin probe studies provide a window on structural changes in ferritin not seen in most previous work and indicate that long-range effects caused by point mutations must be carefully considered when drawing conclusions from mutagenesis studies of the protein.  相似文献   

20.
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