Article
The Unusual Intersubunit Ferroxidase Center of Listeria innocua Dps Is Required for Hydrogen Peroxide Detoxification but Not for Iron Uptake. A Study with Site-Specific Mutants†,‡
This work was supported by Grant MIUR PRIN 2002 (S.S.), Fondazione Pasteur Cenci-Bolognetti and Grant MIUR PRIN 2003 (E.C.), and NIH Grant R01 GM 20194 (N.D.C.).
The atomic coordinates of the Listeria innocua Dps mutants have been deposited with the Protein Data Bank (accession code: 2BK6 for H31G; 2BKC for H43G; 2BJY for H31G-H43G).
Università La Sapienza.
University of New Hampshire.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +39-06-49910761. Fax: +39-06-4440062. E-mail: emilia.chiancone@ uniroma1.it.
Abstract

The role of the ferroxidase center in iron uptake and hydrogen peroxide detoxification was investigated in Listeria innocua Dps by substituting the iron ligands His31, His43, and Asp58 with glycine or alanine residues either individually or in combination. The X-ray crystal structures of the variants reveal only small alterations in the ferroxidase center region compared to the native protein. Quenching of the protein fluorescence was exploited to assess stoichiometry and affinity of metal binding. Substitution of either His31 or His43 decreases Fe(II) affinity significantly with respect to wt L. innocua Dps (K
105 vs
107 M-1) but does not alter the binding stoichiometry [12 Fe(II)/dodecamer]. In the H31G-H43G and H31G-H43G-D58A variants, binding of Fe(II) does not take place with measurable affinity. Oxidation of protein-bound Fe(II) increases the binding stoichiometry to 24 Fe(III)/dodecamer. However, the extent of fluorescence quenching upon Fe(III) binding decreases, and the end point near 24 Fe(III)/dodecamer becomes less distinct with increase in the number of mutated residues. In the presence of dioxygen, the mutations have little or no effect on the kinetics of iron uptake and in the formation of micelles inside the protein shell. In contrast, in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, with increase in the number of substitutions the rate of iron oxidation and the capacity to inhibit Fenton chemistry, thereby protecting DNA from oxidative damage, appear increasingly compromised, a further indication of the role of ferroxidation in conferring peroxide tolerance to the bacterium.
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History
- Published In Issue April 19, 2005
- Received January 3, 2005
Revised Manuscript Received February 17, 2005
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