The Bacterial Irr Protein Is Required for Coordination of Heme Biosynthesis with Iron Availability
Heme is a ubiquitous macromolecule that serves as the active group of proteins involved in many cellular processes. The multienzyme pathway for heme formation culminates with the insertion of iron into a protoporphyrin ring. The cytotoxicity of porphyrins suggests the need for coordination of its bi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1998-08, Vol.273 (34), p.21669-21674 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Heme is a ubiquitous macromolecule that serves as the active group of proteins involved in many cellular processes. The multienzyme pathway for heme formation culminates with the insertion of iron into a protoporphyrin ring. The cytotoxicity of porphyrins suggests the need for coordination of its biosynthesis with iron availability. We isolated a mutant strain of the bacteriumBradyrhizobium japonicum that, under iron limitation, accumulated protoporphyrin and showed aberrantly high expression ofhemB, an iron-regulated gene encoding the heme synthesis enzyme δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase. The strain carries a loss of function mutation in irr, a newly described gene that encodes a putative member of the GntR family of bacterial transcriptional regulators. Irr accumulated only under iron limitation, and turned over rapidly upon an increase in iron availability. A separate role for Irr in controlling the cellular iron level was inferred based on a deficiency in high affinity iron transport activity in the irr strain, and suggests that regulation of the heme pathway is coordinated with iron homeostasis. A high level of protoporphyrin accumulation is not a normal consequence of nutritional iron deprivation, thus a mechanism for iron-dependent control of heme biosynthesis may be present in other organisms. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.273.34.21669 |