4.6 Article

Iron-regulated assembly of the cytosolic iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis machinery

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 298, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102094

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM089778, GM112763]
  2. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Service Award from the National Institute of Health [GM007185]

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This study investigated the mechanism of the cytosolic iron-sulfur cluster assembly (CIA) pathway using targeted proteomics. The results showed that certain CIA components and substrates interact with the CIA scaffold complex and the CIA targeting complex. Moreover, these interactions are regulated by environmental cues such as iron and oxygen availability. These findings suggest that the CIA pathway adapts to changes in cellular environment through complex reorganization.
The cytosolic iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster assembly (CIA) pathway delivers Fe-S clusters to nuclear and cytosolic Fe-S proteins involved in essential cellular functions. Although the delivery process is regulated by the availability of iron and oxygen, it remains unclear how CIA components orchestrate the cluster transfer under varying cellular environments. Here, we utilized a targeted proteomics assay for monitoring CIA factors and substrates to characterize the CIA machinery. We find that nucleotide-binding protein 1 (NUBP1/NBP35), cytosolic iron-sulfur assembly component 3 (CIAO3/NARFL), and CIA substrates associate with nucleotide-binding protein 2 (NUBP2/CFD1), a component of the CIA scaffold complex. NUBP2 also weakly associates with the CIA targeting complex (MMS19, CIAO1, and CIAO2B) indicating the possible existence of a higher order complex. Interactions between CIAO3 and the CIA scaffold complex are strengthened upon iron supplementation or low oxygen tension, while iron chelation and reactive oxygen species weaken CIAO3 interactions with CIA components. We further demonstrate that CIAO3 mutants defective in Fe-S cluster binding fail to integrate into the higher order complexes. However, these mutants exhibit stronger associations with CIA substrates under conditions in which the association with the CIA targeting complex is reduced suggesting that CIAO3 and CIA substrates may associate in complexes independently of the CIA targeting complex. Together, our data suggest that CIA components potentially form a metabolon whose assembly is regulated by environmental cues and requires Fe-S cluster incorporation in CIAO3. These findings provide additional evidence that the CIA pathway adapts to changes in cellular environment through complex reorganization.

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