4.4 Article

Kinetics of iron release from ferric binding protein (FbpA):: Mechanistic implications in bacterial periplasm-to-cytosol Fe3+ transport

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 44, Issue 28, Pages 9606-9618

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi0505518

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The ferric binding protein (FbpA) transports iron across the periplasmic space of certain Gram-negative bacteria and is an important component involved in iron acquisition by pathogenic Neisseria spp. (Neisseria gonorrheae and Neisseria meningitidis). Previous work has demonstrated that the synergistic anion, required for tight Fe3+ sequestration by FbpA, also plays a key role in inserting Fe3+ into the FbpA binding site. Here, we investigate the iron release process from various forms of holo-FbpA, Fe(3+)FbpA-X, during the course of a chelator competition reaction using EDTA and Tiron. Fe(3+)FbpA-X represents the protein assembly complex with different synergistic anions, X = PO43- and NTA. Stepwise mechanisms of Fe3+ release are proposed on the basis of kinetic profiles of these chelator competition reactions. Fe(3+)FbpA-PO4 and Fe(3+)FbpA-NTA react differently with EDTA and Tiron during the Fe3+- exchange process. EDTA replaces PO43- and NTA from the first coordination shell of Fe3+ and acts as a synergistic anion to give a spectroscopically distinguishable intermediate, Fe(3+)FbpA-EDTA, prior to pulling Fe3+ out of the protein. Tiron, on the other hand, does not act as a synergistic anion but is a more efficient competing chelator as it removes Fe3+ from FbpA at rate much faster than EDTA. These results reaffirm the contribution of the synergistic anion to the FbpA iron transport process as the anion, in addition to playing a facilitative role in iron binding, appears to have a gatekeeper role, thereby modulating the Fe3+ release process.

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