Iron is an essential element involved in various metabolic processes. The ferritin family of proteins forms nanocage assembly and is involved in iron oxidation, storage, and mineralization. Although several structures of human ferritins and bacterioferritins have been solved, there is still no complete structure that shows both the trapped Fe-biomineral cluster and the nanocage. Furthermore, whereas the mechanism of iron trafficking has been explained using various approaches, structural details on the biomineralization process (i.e. the formation of the mineral itself) are generally lacking. Here, we report the cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of apoform and biomineral bound form (holoforms) of the bacterioferritin (ScBfr) nanocage and the subunit crystal structure. The holoforms show different stages of Fe-biomineral accumulation inside the nanocage, in which the connections exist in two of the fourfold channels of the nanocage between the C-terminal of the ScBfr monomers and the Fe-biomineral cluster. The mutation and truncation of the bacterioferritin residues involved in these connections significantly reduced the iron and phosphate binding in comparison with those of the wild type and together explain the underlying mechanism. Collectively, our results represent a prototype for the bacterioferritin nanocage, which reveals insight into its biomineralization and the potential channel for bacterioferritin-associated iron trafficking.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad235 | DOI Listing |
PNAS Nexus
July 2023
Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543, Singapore.
Iron is an essential element involved in various metabolic processes. The ferritin family of proteins forms nanocage assembly and is involved in iron oxidation, storage, and mineralization. Although several structures of human ferritins and bacterioferritins have been solved, there is still no complete structure that shows both the trapped Fe-biomineral cluster and the nanocage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
January 2023
Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, 769008Odisha, India.
The self-assembled ferritin nanocages, nature's solution to iron toxicity and its low solubility, scavenge free iron to synthesize hydrated ferric oxyhydroxide mineral inside their central cavity by protein-mediated ferroxidase and hydrolytic/nucleation reactions. These complex processes in ferritin commence with the rapid influx of Fe ions the inter-subunit contact points (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiotechnol Adv
December 2022
College of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Jiangsu 225009, China.
Bacterioferritin (Bfr) is a subfamily of ferritin protein family. Bfrs are composed of 24 identical subunits and self-assemble into 4-3-2-fold symmetric cage-like structure with the incorporation of 12 heme groups into twelve 2-fold symmetric binding sites between subunits. Bfr protein cage has an outer diameter of ∼12 nm and interior cavity diameter of ∼8 nm with a total of 62 pores to connect the interior cavity with the bulk solution outside the protein nanocage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
November 2021
Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela 769008, Odisha, India.
The uptake and utilization of iron remains critical for the survival/virulence of the host/pathogens in spite of the limitations (low bioavailability/high toxicity) associated with this nutrient. Both the host and pathogens manage to overcome these problems by utilizing the iron repository protein nanocages, ferritins, which not only sequester and detoxify the free Fe(II) ions but also decrease the iron solubility gap by synthesizing/encapsulating the Fe(III)-oxyhydroxide biomineral in its central hollow nanocavity. Bacterial pathogens including (), the causative agent of tuberculosis, encode a distinct subclass of ferritins called bacterioferritin (BfrA), which binds heme, the versatile redox cofactor, coaxial, conserved methionine (M52) residues at its subunit-dimer interfaces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Inorg Chem
May 2021
Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, 769008, Odisha, India.
In vitro, reductive mobilization of ferritin iron using suitable electron transfer mediators has emerged as a possible mechanism to mimic the iron release process, in vivo. Nature uses flavins as electron relay molecules for important biological oxidation and oxygenation reactions. Therefore, the current work utilizes three flavin analogues: riboflavin (RF), flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), which differ in size and charge but have similar redox potentials, to relay electron from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) to ferritin mineral core.
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