IRON RELEASE FROM RECOMBINANT N-LOBE AND MUTANTS OF HUMAN TRANSFERRIN

被引:57
作者
ZAK, O
AISEN, P
CRAWLEY, JB
JOANNOU, CL
PATEL, KJ
RAFIQ, M
EVANS, RW
机构
[1] YESHIVA UNIV ALBERT EINSTEIN COLL MED,DEPT PHYSIOL & BIOPHYS,BRONX,NY 10461
[2] UNITED MED & DENT SCH,GUYS HOSP,DIV BIOCHEM & MOLEC BIOL,LONDON SE1 9RT,ENGLAND
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
D O I
10.1021/bi00044a020
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Mutations of kinetically active residues in the recombinant N-lobe of human transferrin may accelerate or retard release of iron from the protein to pyrophosphate, thereby providing means for exploring the individual roles of such residues in the concerted mechanisms of release. Using an established spectrofluorometric method and pyrophosphate as the required iron-sequestering agent, we have compared release from unaltered native transferrin and recombinant N-lobe half-transferrin to release from six N-lobe mutants, R124S, R124K, K206R, H207E, H249Y, and Y95H. Mutation of R124, which serves as a principal anchor for the synergistic carbonate anion ordinarily required for iron binding by transferrin, accelerates release. This effect is most marked at endosomal pH, 5.6, and is also evident at extracellular pH, 7.4, pointing to a critical and perhaps initiating role of carbonate in the release process. Mutation of K206 to arginine, or of H207 to glutamine, each lying in the interdomain cleft of the N-lobe, gives products mimicking the arrangements in lactoferrin. Release of iron from these two mutants, as from lactoferrin, is substantially slower than from unaltered recombinant N-lobe. Interdomain residues not directly involved in iron or anion binding may therefore participate in the control of iron release within the endosome. The H249Y mutant releases iron much more rapidly than its wild-type parent or any other mutant, possibly because of steric effects of the additional phenolic ring in the binding site. No simple explanation is available to account for a stabilizing effect of the Y95H mutation. Chloride (or another simple anion) promotes and is essential for iron release from the C-lobe of human transferrin but exerts a retarding effect on release from the N-lobe in native and mutant transferrins alike. A simple model, entailing binding competition between pyrophosphate used to effect release and chloride, substantially accounts for the negative effect of chloride on the N-lobe.
引用
收藏
页码:14428 / 14434
页数:7
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