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The molecular basis of iron-induced oligomerization of frataxin and the role of the ferroxidation reaction in oligomerization.

Söderberg, Christopher LU ; Rajan, Sreekanth LU ; Shkumatov, Aleksander V ; Gakh, Oleksandr ; Schaefer, Susanne ; Ahlgren, Eva-Christina LU ; Svergun, Dmitri I ; Isaya, Grazia and Al-Karadaghi, Salam LU (2013) In Journal of Biological Chemistry 288(12). p.8156-8167
Abstract
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 (SAXS) and X-ray crystallography, we describe the solution structure of the oligomers formed during the iron-dependent assembly of yeast (Yfh1) and E. 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... (More)
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 (SAXS) and X-ray crystallography, we describe the solution structure of the oligomers formed during the iron-dependent assembly of yeast (Yfh1) and E. 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 more than 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. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
volume
288
issue
12
pages
8156 - 8167
publisher
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
external identifiers
  • wos:000316564500016
  • pmid:23344952
  • scopus:84875410144
  • pmid:23344952
ISSN
1083-351X
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M112.442285
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
1f5078cc-84f1-4eb4-ba7e-b8f375d7fdc2 (old id 3438417)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:37:37
date last changed
2022-04-20 03:52:08
@article{1f5078cc-84f1-4eb4-ba7e-b8f375d7fdc2,
  abstract     = {{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 (SAXS) and X-ray crystallography, we describe the solution structure of the oligomers formed during the iron-dependent assembly of yeast (Yfh1) and E. 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 more than 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.}},
  author       = {{Söderberg, Christopher and Rajan, Sreekanth and Shkumatov, Aleksander V and Gakh, Oleksandr and Schaefer, Susanne and Ahlgren, Eva-Christina and Svergun, Dmitri I and Isaya, Grazia and Al-Karadaghi, Salam}},
  issn         = {{1083-351X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{12}},
  pages        = {{8156--8167}},
  publisher    = {{American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology}},
  series       = {{Journal of Biological Chemistry}},
  title        = {{The molecular basis of iron-induced oligomerization of frataxin and the role of the ferroxidation reaction in oligomerization.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.442285}},
  doi          = {{10.1074/jbc.M112.442285}},
  volume       = {{288}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}