4.8 Article

Mammalian Frataxin Controls Sulfur Production and Iron Entry during de Novo Fe4S4 Cluster Assembly

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 135, Issue 2, Pages 733-740

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja308736e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Community under the European Research Council [206634/ISCATAXIA]
  2. Seventh Framework Programme [242193/EFACTS]
  3. Ph.D. fellowship from La Fondation Sebastien Grosjean contre les Maladies Orphelines
  4. Region Rhone-Alpes [CIBLE 07 016335]
  5. ANR FeStreS

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Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster-containing proteins are essential components of cells. In eukaryotes, Fe-S clusters are synthesized by the mitochondrial-iron sulfur cluster (ISC) machinery and the cytosolic iron-sulfur assembly (CIA) system. In the mammalian ISC machinery, preassembly of the Fe-S cluster on the scaffold protein (ISCU) involves a cysteine desulfurase complex (NFS1/ISD11) and frataxin (FXN), the protein deficient in Friedreich's ataxia. Here, by comparing the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of quaternary (ISCU/NFS1/ISD11/FXN) and ternary (ISCU/NFS1/ISD11) complexes, we show that FXN stabilizes the quaternary complex and controls iron entry to the complex through activation of cysteine desulfurization.. Furthermore, we show for the first time that in the presence of iron and L-cysteine, an [Fe4S4] cluster is formed within the quaternary complex that can be transferred to mammalian aconitase (mACO2) to generate an active enzyme. In the absence of FXN, although the ternary complex can assemble an Fe-S cluster, the cluster is inefficiently transferred to ACO2. Taken together, these data help to unravel further the Fe-S cluster assembly process and the molecular basis of Friedreich's ataxia.

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