Reaction Paths of Iron Oxidation and Hydrolysis in Horse Spleen and Recombinant Human Ferritins
UV−visible spectroscopy, electrode oximetry, and pH stat were used to study Fe(II) oxidation and hydrolysis in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) and recombinant human H-chain and L-chain ferritins (HuHF and HuLF). Appropriate test reactions and electrode responses were measured, establishing the reliabil...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochemistry (Easton) 1998-07, Vol.37 (27), p.9743-9750 |
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Zusammenfassung: | UV−visible spectroscopy, electrode oximetry, and pH stat were used to study Fe(II) oxidation and hydrolysis in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) and recombinant human H-chain and L-chain ferritins (HuHF and HuLF). Appropriate test reactions and electrode responses were measured, establishing the reliability of oxygen electrode/pH stat for kinetics studies of iron uptake by ferritin. Stoichiometric ratios, Fe(II)/O2 and H+/Fe(II), and rates of oxygen uptake and proton production were simultaneously measured as a function of iron loading of the protein. The data show a clear distinction between the diiron ferroxidase site and mineral surface catalyzed oxidation of Fe(II). The oxidation/hydrolysis reaction attributed to the ferroxidase site has been determined for the first time and is given by 2Fe2+ + O2 + 3H2O → [Fe2O(OH)2]2+ + H2O2 + 2H+ where [Fe2O(OH)2]2+ represents the hydrolyzed dinuclear iron(III) center postulated to be a μ-oxo-bridged species from UV spectrometric titration data and absorption band maxima. The transfer of iron from the ferroxidase site to the mineral core has been now established to be [Fe2O(OH)2]2+ + H2O → 2FeOOH(core) + 2H+. Regeneration of protein ferroxidase activity with time is observed for both HoSF and HuHF, consistent with their having enzymatic properties, and is facilitated by higher pH (7.0) and temperature (37 °C) and by the presence of L-subunit and is complete within 10 min. In accord with previous studies, the mineral surface reaction is given by 4Fe2+ + O2 + 6H2O → 4FeOOH(core) + 8H+. As the protein progressively acquires iron, oxidation/hydrolysis increasingly shifts from a ferroxidase site to a mineral surface based mechanism, decreasing the production of H2O2. |
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ISSN: | 0006-2960 1520-4995 |
DOI: | 10.1021/bi973128a |