4.3 Article

The ferroxidase center is essential for ferritin iron loading in the presence of phosphate and minimizes side reactions that form Fe(III)-phosphate colloids

Journal

BIOMETALS
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 259-273

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10534-011-9500-z

Keywords

Non-transferrin bound iron; Ferritin; Chronic kidney disease; Transferrin; Soluble Fe(III)-phosphate complexes; Ferroxidase activity; Ferroxidase assay

Funding

  1. Brigham Young University

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Ferritin iron loading was studied in the presence of physiological serum phosphate concentrations (1 mM), elevated serum concentrations (2-5 mM), and intracellular phosphate concentrations (10 mM). Experiments compared iron loading into homopolymers of H and L ferritin with horse spleen ferritin. Prior to studying the reactions with ferritin, a series of control reactions were performed to study the solution chemistry of Fe2+ and phosphate. In the absence of ferritin, phosphate catalyzed Fe2+ oxidation and formed soluble polymeric Fe(III)-phosphate complexes. The Fe(III)-phosphate complexes were characterized by electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy, which revealed spherical nanoparticles with diameters of 10-20 nm. The soluble Fe(III)-phosphate complexes also formed as competing reactions during iron loading into ferritin. Elemental analysis on ferritin samples separated from the Fe(III)-phosphate complexes showed that as the phosphate concentration increased, the iron loading into horse ferritin decreased. The composition of the mineral that does form inside horse ferritin has a higher iron/phosphate ratio (similar to 1:1) than ferritin purified from tissue (similar to 10:1). Phosphate significantly inhibited iron loading into L ferritin, due to the lack of the ferroxidase center in this homopolymer. Spectrophotometric assays of iron loading into H ferritin showed identical iron loading curves in the presence of phosphate, indicating that the ferroxidase center of H ferritin efficiently competes with phosphate for the binding and oxidation of Fe2+. Additional studies demonstrated that H ferritin ferroxidase activity could be used to oxidize Fe2+ and facilitate the transfer of the Fe3+ into apo transferrin in the presence of phosphate.

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