4.7 Article

Availability of Ferritin-Bound Iron to Enterobacteriaceae

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232113087

Keywords

ferritin; Salmonella enterica subsp; enterica serovar Typhimurium; Escherichia coli; nutritional immunity; superoxide dismutase; reactive oxygen species; iron metabolism; siderophore

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 33062-B]
  2. FWF

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The sequestration of iron in case of infection is a strategy of host defense, but the function of ferritin in bacterial infections is not fully understood. Iron bound to ferritin is less available to Salmonella, but still enhances bacterial growth significantly. Superoxide dismutase may weaken bacterial iron uptake from ferritin by siderophore-independent mechanisms.
The sequestration of iron in case of infection, termed nutritional immunity, is an established strategy of host defense. However, the interaction between pathogens and the mammalian iron storage protein ferritin is hitherto not completely understood. To better characterize the function of ferritin in Gram-negative infections, we incubated iron-starved cultures of Salmonella Typhimurium and knockout mutant strains defective for major iron uptake pathways or Escherichia coli with horse spleen ferritin or ionic iron as the sole iron source. Additionally, we added bovine superoxide dismutase and protease inhibitors to the growth medium to assess the effect of superoxide and bacterial proteases, respectively, on Salmonella proliferation and reductive iron release. Compared to free ionic iron, ferritin-bound iron was less available to Salmonella, but was still sufficient to significantly enhance the growth of the bacteria. In the absence of various iron acquisition genes, the availability of ferritin iron further decreased. Supplementation with superoxide dismutase significantly reduced the growth of the Delta entC knockout strain with holoferritin as the sole iron source in comparison with ionic ferrous iron. In contrast, this difference was not observed in the wildtype strain, suggesting that superoxide dismutase undermines bacterial iron uptake from ferritin by siderophore-independent mechanisms. Ferritin seems to diminish iron availability for bacteria in comparison to ionic iron, and its iron sequestering effect could possibly be enhanced by host superoxide dismutase activity.

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