4.4 Article

The FeoC [4Fe-4S] Cluster Is Redox-Active and Rapidly Oxygen-Sensitive

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 58, Issue 49, Pages 4935-4949

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00745

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF CAREER grant [1844624]
  2. NIH-NIGMS grant [T32 GM066706, R35 GM133479]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-76SF00515]
  4. DOE Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  5. National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences [P41 GM103393]
  6. Division Of Chemistry
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1844624] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The acquisition of iron is essential to establishing virulence among most pathogens. Under acidic and/or anaerobic conditions, most bacteria utilize the widely distributed ferrous iron (Fe2+) uptake (Feo) system to import metabolically-required iron. The Feo system is inadequately understood at the atomic, molecular, and mechanistic levels, but we do know it is composed of a main membrane component (FeoB) essential for iron translocation, as well as two small, cytosolic proteins (FeoA and FeoC) hypothesized to function as accessories to this process. FeoC has many hypothetical functions, including that of an iron-responsive transcriptional regulator. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that Escherichia coli FeoC (EcFeoC) binds an [Fe-S] cluster. Using electronic absorption, X-ray absorption, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies, we extensively characterize the nature of this cluster. Under strictly anaerobic conditions after chemical reconstitution, we demonstrate that EcFeoC binds a redox-active [4Fe-4S](2+/+) cluster that is rapidly oxygen-sensitive and decays to a [2Fe-2S](2+) cluster (t(1/2) approximate to 20 s), similar to the [Fe-S] cluster in the fumarate and nitrate reductase (FNR) transcriptional regulator. We further show that this behavior is nearly identical to the homologous K. pneumoniae FeoC, suggesting a redox-active, oxygen-sensitive [4Fe-4S]2 cofactor is a general phenomenon of cluster-binding FeoCs. Finally, in contrast to FNR, we show that the [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster binding to FeoC is associated with modest conformational changes of the polypeptide, but not protein dimerization. We thus posit a working hypothesis in which the cluster-binding FeoCs may function as oxygen-sensitive iron sensors that fine-tune pathogenic ferrous iron acquisition.

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