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Iron release from ferritin by flavin nucleotides
Authors:Galina Melman  Fadi Bou-Abdallah  Eleanor Vane  Poli Maura  Paolo Arosio  Artem Melman
Affiliation:1. Clarkson University, Department of Chemistry & Biomolecular Science, Potsdam, New York, USA;2. State University of New York at Potsdam, Department of Chemistry, Potsdam, New York, USA;3. Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, 25123 Brescia, Italy
Abstract:

Background

Extensive in-vitro studies have focused on elucidating the mechanism of iron uptake and mineral core formation in ferritin. However, despite a plethora of studies attempting to characterize iron release under different experimental conditions, the in-vivo mobilization of iron from ferritin remains poorly understood.Several iron-reductive mobilization pathways have been proposed including, among others, flavin mononucleotides, ascorbate, glutathione, dithionite, and polyphenols. Here, we investigate the kinetics of iron release from ferritin by reduced flavin nucleotide, FMNH2, and discuss the physiological significance of this process in-vivo.

Methods

Iron release from horse spleen ferritin and recombinant human heteropolymer ferritin was followed by the change in optical density of the Fe(II)–bipyridine complex using a Cary 50 Bio UV–Vis spectrophotometer. Oxygen consumption curves were followed on a MI 730 Clark oxygen microelectrode.

Results

The reductive mobilization of iron from ferritin by the nonenzymatic FMN/NAD(P)H system is extremely slow in the presence of oxygen and might involve superoxide radicals, but not FMNH2. Under anaerobic conditions, a very rapid phase of iron mobilization by FMNH2 was observed.

Conclusions

Under normoxic conditions, FMNH2 alone might not be a physiologically significant contributor to iron release from ferritin.

General significance

There is no consensus on which iron release pathway is predominantly responsible for iron mobilization from ferritin under cellular conditions. While reduced flavin mononucleotide (FMNH2) is one likely candidate for in-vivo ferritin iron removal, its significance is confounded by the rapid oxidation of the latter by molecular oxygen.
Keywords:Reductive mobilization   Iron core   Ferritin   FMN/NAD(P)H   Oxygen consumption   Iron release
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