Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1318200 | Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
High affinity iron uptake in fungi is supported by a plasma membrane protein complex that includes a multicopper ferroxidase enzyme and a ferric iron permease. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, this complex is composed of the ferroxidase Fet3p and the permease Ftr1p. FeII serves as substrate for Fe-uptake by being substrate for Fet3p; the resulting Fet3p-produced FeIII is then transported across the membrane via Ftr1p. A model of metabolite channeling of this FeIII is tested here by first constructing and kinetically characterizing in Fe-uptake two Fet3p-Ftr1p chimeras in which the multicopper oxidase/ferroxidase domain of Fet3p has been fused to the Ftr1p iron permease. Although the bifunctional chimeras are as kinetically efficient in Fe-uptake as is the wild type two-component system, they lack the adaptability and fidelity in Fe-uptake of the wild type. Specifically, Fe-uptake through the Fet3p, Ftr1p complex is insensitive to a potential FeIII trapping agent - citrate - whereas Fe-uptake via the chimeric proteins is competitively inhibited by this FeIII chelator. This inhibition does not appear to be due to scavenging Fet3p-produced FeIII that is in equilibrium with bulk solvent but could be due to leakiness to citrate found in the bifunctional but not the two-component system. The data are consistent with a channeling model of Fe-trafficking in the Fet3p, Ftr1p complex and suggest that in this system, Fet3p serves as a redox sieve that presents FeIII specifically for permeation through Ftr1p.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Authors
E.Y. Kwok, C.S. Stoj, S. Severance, D.J. Kosman,