4.5 Article

Insight into the function of active site residues in the catalytic mechanism of human ferrochelatase

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 478, Issue 17, Pages 3239-3252

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20210460

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK111653, GM124203, DK096051]

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Ferrochelatase is an important enzyme involved in catalyzing heme synthesis in humans, serving a regulatory and catalytic role in the pathway. Studies on its crystal structures, kinetic properties, and catalytic cycle have provided insights into its functions. However, questions regarding metal ion delivery, active site residue roles, and the catalytic mechanism remain open for further investigation.
Ferrochelatase catalyzes the insertion of ferrous iron into a porphyrin macrocycle to produce the essential cofactor, heme. In humans this enzyme not only catalyzes the terminal step, but also serves a regulatory step in the heme synthesis pathway. Over a dozen crystal structures of human ferrochelatase have been solved and many variants have been characterized kinetically. In addition, hydrogen deuterium exchange, resonance Raman, molecular dynamics, and high level quantum mechanic studies have added to our understanding of the catalytic cycle of the enzyme. However, an understanding of how the metal ion is delivered and the specific role that active site residues play in catalysis remain open questions. Data are consistent with metal binding and insertion occurring from the side opposite from where pyrrole proton abstraction takes place. To better understand iron delivery and binding as well as the role of conserved residues in the active site, we have constructed and characterized a series of enzyme variants. Crystallographic studies as well as rescue and kinetic analysis of variants were performed. Data from these studies are consistent with the M76 residue playing a role in active site metal binding and formation of a weak iron protein ligand being necessary for product release. Additionally, structural data support a role for E343 in proton abstraction and product release in coordination with a peptide loop composed of Q302, S303 and K304 that act a metal sensor.

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