AI Article Synopsis

  • Human transferrin is a bilobal protein that transports iron into cells, with the C-lobe responsible for binding to cellular transferrin receptors and donating iron.
  • Researchers used mass spectrometry to study conformational changes in the C-lobe (residues 334-679) when bound to the transferrin receptor (residues 121-760), observing significant decreases in oxidation rates of specific C-lobe residues upon complex formation.
  • The study identified key modification sites in both the C-lobe and receptor, highlighting the RGD sequence in the receptor as a main binding site for the transferrin C-lobe, which confirms its role in iron transport.

Article Abstract

Human transferrin, a bilobal protein, with each lobe bearing a single iron-binding site, functions to transport iron into cells. While the N-terminal lobe alone does not measurably bind cellular transferrin receptors or serve as an iron donor for cells, the C-lobe is capable of both functions. We used hydroxyl radical-mediated protein footprinting and mass spectrometry to reveal the conformational changes that occur upon complex formation for the human transferrin C-lobe (residues 334-679) bound to the ectodomain of human transferrin receptor 1 (residues 121-760). Oxidation rates for proteolytic peptides in the C-lobe, the receptor, and their complex have been measured by mass spectrometry; upon formation of the complex, a dramatic decrease in modification rates, indicating protection of specific side chain groups, can be seen in C-lobe sequences corresponding to residues 381-401, 415-433, and 457-470. Peptide sequences experiencing modification rate decreases in the transferrin receptor upon C-lobe binding include residues 232-240, 365-371, 496-508, 580 and 581, 614-623, 634-646, 647-681, and 733-760. In addition, several peptides in the receptor exhibit enhancements in the rate of modification consistent with allosteric effects of complex formation. Using tandem mass spectrometry, the sites of modification with altered reactivity in the complex include Met382, Met389, Trp460, Met464, and Phe427 in the C-lobe and Tyr503, Pro581, Tyr611, Leu619, Met635, Phe650, Trp740, Trp754, and Phe760 within the transferrin receptor. Using available genetic, biochemical, and structural data, we confirm that the conserved RGD sequence (residues 646-648) in the helical domain of the transferrin receptor, including residues from Leu619 to Phe650, is a primary binding site for the transferrin C-lobe.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi0352973DOI Listing

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