In the bacterial ISC system for iron-sulfur cluster assembly, IscU acts as a primary scaffold protein, and the molecular co-chaperones HscA and HscB specifically interact with IscU to facilitate ATP-driven cluster transfer. In this work, cluster transfer from Azotobacter vinelandii [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster-bound IscU to apo-Grx5, a general purpose monothiol glutaredoxin in A. vinelandii, was monitored by circular dichroism spectroscopy, in the absence and in the presence of HscA/HscB/Mg-ATP. The results indicate a 700-fold enhancement in the rate of [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster transfer in the presence of the co-chaperones and Mg-ATP, yielding a second-order rate constant of 20 000 M(-1) min(-1) at 23 °C. Thus, HscA and HscB are required for efficient ATP-dependent [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster transfer from IscU to Grx5. The results support a role for monothiol Grx's in storing and transporting [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) clusters assembled on IscU and illustrate the limitations of interpreting in vitro cluster transfer studies involving [Fe(2)S(2)]-IscU in the absence of the dedicated HscA/HscB co-chaperone system.
In the bacterial ISC system for iron-sulfur cluster assembly, IscU acts as a primary scaffold protein, and the molecular co-chaperones HscA and HscB specifically interact with IscU to facilitate ATP-driven cluster transfer. In this work, cluster transfer from Azotobacter vinelandii [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster-bound IscU to apo-Grx5, a general purpose monothiol glutaredoxin in A. vinelandii, was monitored by circular dichroism spectroscopy, in the absence and in the presence of HscA/HscB/Mg-ATP. The results indicate a 700-fold enhancement in the rate of [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster transfer in the presence of the co-chaperones and Mg-ATP, yielding a second-order rate constant of 20 000 M(-1) min(-1) at 23 °C. Thus, HscA and HscB are required for efficient ATP-dependent [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) cluster transfer from IscU to Grx5. The results support a role for monothiolGrx's in storing and transporting [Fe(2)S(2)](2+) clusters assembled on IscU and illustrate the limitations of interpreting in vitro cluster transfer studies involving [Fe(2)S(2)]-IscU in the absence of the dedicated HscA/HscB co-chaperone system.
The ubiquitous and essential
IscU protein serves as the primary scaffold for cysteine desulfurase-mediated
iron–sulfur cluster assembly in the ISC machinery for cluster
biogenesis that is used by many bacteria and in eukaryotic mitochondria.[1−3] Under reconstitution conditions, the initial product is a stable
form containing one [Fe2S2]2+ cluster
per homodimer, [Fe2S2]-IscU, which is slowly
converted under strictly anaerobic conditions into a form containing
one [Fe4S4]2+ cluster per homodimer,
[Fe4S4]-IscU, via reductive coupling of two
[Fe2S2]2+ clusters at the subunit
interface.[4,5]In vivo studies have shown
that IscU-type proteins have critical roles in the maturation of both
[Fe2S2] and [Fe4S4] cluster-containing
proteins under aerobic and anaerobic conditions.[6] Taken together with recent structural evidence that the
initial product of IscS/IscU cluster biosynthesis is an IscU monomer
with a solvent-exposed [Fe2S2] cluster,[3] there is little doubt that the stable [Fe2S2]-IscU dimer is physiologically relevant for
initiating cellular [Fe2S2] cluster trafficking.
Moreover, the bacterial isc operon also contains
an essential and dedicated molecular co-chaperone system, HscA/HscB
in bacteria (Ssq1/Jac1 in yeast mitochondria), which serves to specifically
enhance the rate of [Fe2S2]2+ cluster
transfer from the [Fe2S2]-IscU dimer to apo
acceptor proteins such as Isc ferredoxin (Fdx) in an ATP-dependent
reaction.[7,8] However, it is currently unclear if IscU
transfers clusters directly to acceptor proteins or via proposed intermediate
cluster carrier proteins such as the A-type,[9,10] Nfu-type,[11,12] or monothiol glutaredoxins (Grx’s).[13,14]In vivo studies in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae have demonstrated an important role for Grx5 in
Fe–S cluster
biogenesis.[15] YeastGrx5 is a member of
a ubiquitous and well-defined class of monothiolGrx’s with
CGFS active sites that exhibit low glutathione-dependent thiol–disulfide
oxidoreductase activity.[14] Rather, 55Fe-radiolabeled immunoprecipitation studies have indicated
a role in facilitating transfer of Fe–S clusters assembled
on Isu1, a yeast homologue of IscU.[16] Moreover,
spectroscopic and structural studies have shown that monothiolGrx’s
can bind subunit-bridging [Fe2S2]2+ clusters, ligated by the active-site cysteines of each monomer and
two glutathiones, that can be rapidly transferred to physiologically
relevant acceptor proteins.[13,17,18] However, there is currently no direct evidence for [Fe2S2]2+ cluster transfer from IscU to apo monothiolGrx’s. In this work, we present direct spectroscopic evidence
for rapid, ATP-driven, [Fe2S2]2+ cluster
transfer from [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 in the
presence of HscA and HscB using recombinant proteins from Azotobacter vinelandii. The results demonstrate the critical
role that HscA and HscB play in facilitating cluster transfer from
[Fe2S2]-IscU to monothiolGrx’s and suggest
an important role for monothiolGrx’s in the trafficking of
[Fe2S2]2+ clusters assembled on IscU.
The experimental methods for expressing, purifying, and assaying the
proteins used in this work and the protocols used for cluster transfer
reactions are described in the Supporting Information.The marked differences in the CD spectra of the [Fe2S2]2+ centers in A. vinelandiiIscU and Grx5, red and blue spectra, respectively, in Figure 1, make this the method of choice for monitoring
cluster transfer between these two proteins. No cluster transfer was
observed from [Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscU over
a period of 3 h using a 2-fold excess of [Fe2S2] clusters per apo-IscU dimer, in the presence of physiologically
relevant levels of glutathione (3 mM). However, the reverse reaction
involving cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-IscU
to apo-Grx5 does occur, albeit very slowly, in the presence of 3 mM
glutathione. This is shown in Figure 1, which
indicates ∼30% cluster transfer over a period of 3 h, using
IscU containing 0.9 [Fe2S2]2+ cluster
per homodimer and a 1.7-fold excess of dimeric Grx5 per IscU [Fe2S2] cluster. In contrast, in the presence of HscA,
HscB, Mg-ATP, and KCl (required for optimal ATPase activity of HscA),
the CD spectrum of [Fe2S2]-IscU is perturbed
by binding to HscA and HscB, as previously observed,[7] and the rate of cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 is dramatically enhanced, going to completion
within 6 min of initiating the reaction by the addition of Mg-ATP,
see Figure 2.
Figure 1
Time course of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU (45 μM
in [Fe2S2]2+ clusters) to apo-Grx5
(150 μM in
monomer) monitored by UV–visible CD spectroscopy at 23 °C.
(A) CD spectra recorded at 0, 7, 20, 40, 60, 80, 120, and 180 min
after adding [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 in 100
mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, with 3 mM glutathione. (B) Simulated CD
spectra corresponding to quantitative [Fe2S2]2+ cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 in 10% increments. Δε values are based
on the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster concentration,
and the path length was 1 cm.
Figure 2
Time course of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx in the
presence of 0.10 mM A. vinelandii HscA and HscB,
40 mM MgCl2, 2 mM ATP, and 150 mM KCl monitored by UV–visible
CD spectroscopy at room temperature. CD spectra were recorded at 3,
6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 40, 50, and 60 min after the addition of
Mg-ATP to the reaction mixture. All other conditions are the same
as described in Figure 1.
Time course of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU (45 μM
in [Fe2S2]2+ clusters) to apo-Grx5
(150 μM in
monomer) monitored by UV–visible CD spectroscopy at 23 °C.
(A) CD spectra recorded at 0, 7, 20, 40, 60, 80, 120, and 180 min
after adding [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 in 100
mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, with 3 mM glutathione. (B) Simulated CD
spectra corresponding to quantitative [Fe2S2]2+ cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5 in 10% increments. Δε values are based
on the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster concentration,
and the path length was 1 cm.Time course of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx in the
presence of 0.10 mM A. vinelandii HscA and HscB,
40 mM MgCl2, 2 mM ATP, and 150 mM KCl monitored by UV–visible
CD spectroscopy at room temperature. CD spectra were recorded at 3,
6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 40, 50, and 60 min after the addition of
Mg-ATP to the reaction mixture. All other conditions are the same
as described in Figure 1.Rate constants for [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5
cluster transfer in the absence and in the presence of the co-chaperones,
Mg-ATP and KCl, were quantitatively assessed by fitting CD intensities
as a function of time to second-order kinetics based on the initial
concentrations of donor and acceptor, see Figure 3. The rate constant increases ∼700-fold, from 30 to
20 000 M–1 min–1,
on addition of the co-chaperones, Mg-ATP and KCl. This is much greater
than the ∼20-fold increase (from 36 to 800 M–1 min–1) in the rate of cluster transfer from
[Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-IscFdx that occurs on addition
of the same co-chaperones.[7] This suggests
that [Fe2S2]-IscU is unlikely to be the immediate
[Fe2S2] cluster donor for maturation of IscFdx,
which functions as an essential electron donor for ISC-mediated cluster
assembly in A. vinelandii.[19] Rather, as discussed below, IscFdx may receive [Fe2S2] clusters directly from Grx5.
Figure 3
Comparison of the kinetics of cluster
transfer from A.
vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5
in the presence and in the absence of HscA/HscB/ATP. All conditions
are the same as described in Figures 1 and 2. The data in the presence of HscA/HscB/ATP (■)
were obtained by continuously monitoring the CD intensity at 460 nm
after initiation of the reaction with Mg-ATP, and the solid line is
a best-fit simulation to second-order kinetics with a rate constant
of 20 000 M–1 min–1. The data in the absence of HscA/HscB/ATP (•)
were obtained by monitoring the difference in the CD intensity at
457 and 408 nm, and the solid line is a best-fit simulation to second-order
kinetics with a rate constant of 30 M–1 min–1.
Comparison of the kinetics of cluster
transfer from A.
vinelandii [Fe2S2]-IscU to apo-Grx5
in the presence and in the absence of HscA/HscB/ATP. All conditions
are the same as described in Figures 1 and 2. The data in the presence of HscA/HscB/ATP (■)
were obtained by continuously monitoring the CD intensity at 460 nm
after initiation of the reaction with Mg-ATP, and the solid line is
a best-fit simulation to second-order kinetics with a rate constant
of 20 000 M–1 min–1. The data in the absence of HscA/HscB/ATP (•)
were obtained by monitoring the difference in the CD intensity at
457 and 408 nm, and the solid line is a best-fit simulation to second-order
kinetics with a rate constant of 30 M–1 min–1.The ability of Grx5 to rapidly and quantitatively
accept [Fe2S2]2+ clusters from [Fe2S2]-IscU in the presence of the co-chaperones,
in an ATP-dependent
reaction, supports a physiological role for monothiolGrx’s
in the trafficking of [Fe2S2]2+ clusters
that are assembled on IscU. MonothiolGrx’s therefore have
the capacity to store and/or deliver [Fe2S2]2+ clusters assembled on U-type scaffold proteins. Interestingly,
slow and reversible [Fe2S2] cluster exchange
via direct protein interaction between human Isu and Grx2, in the
absence of the humanFe–S cluster biogenesis co-chaperone system
(HSPA9 and HSC20)[20,21] and Mg-ATP, has recently been
reported by monitoring loss or gain in disulfide oxidoreductase activity
and isothermal titration calorimetry.[22] Although humanGrx2 (CSYC active site) is a dithiolGrx and has
not been implicated in Fe–S cluster biogenesis, it has been
shown to exist in a mononuclear apo form with high disulfide oxidoreductase
activity and a [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bridged
dimer, ligated by the first active-site cysteine of each Grx2 monomer
and two glutathiones, which lacks disulfide oxidoreductase activity.[23] In light of the stability of the cluster-bound
form with respect to cluster transfer and sensitivity to oxidative
stress, the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster on
humanGrx2 has been proposed to function as a sensor that responds
to oxidative stress by activating the disulfide oxidoreductase activity
via cluster degradation.[24]A [Fe2S2]2+ cluster storage function
for monothiolGrx’s may be required under Fe-replete conditions,
and the extent of cluster loading may be an important sensor of the
cellular Fe–S cluster status. This latter hypothesis is supported
by the accumulating evidence that the Fe regulon in yeast is controlled
by the extent of [Fe2S2] cluster-loading of
the cytosolic Grx3 and Grx4monothiol glutaredoxins.[25−27] In S. cerevisiae, the sensing mechanism involves
interaction of the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound
form of the Grx3 or Grx4 homodimer with a BolA-type protein, termed
Fra2, to form a less labile [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound Grx3/4-Fra2 heterodimer that prevents accumulation
of the Aft transcription factor in the nucleus, where it functions
in activating Fe uptake systems. A related Fe or Fe–S cluster
regulatory function may also occur in bacteria since a stable [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound Grx4/BolA heterodimer
has been reported in Escherichia coli, where Grx4
is the sole monothiolGrx.[28] An homologous
BolA protein is also present in A. vinelandii. Alternatively,
either the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound
monothiolGrx homodimer or the Grx-BolA heterodimer may serve to regulate
Fe–S cluster biogenesis in bacteria by acting as the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster donor for IscR, which
acts as a transcriptional repressor of the entire isc operon in its [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound
form.[29]In addition to a potential
[Fe2S2]2+ cluster storage or sensing
role for monothiolGrx’s, the
available evidence for rapid cluster transfer to physiologically relevant
acceptor proteins suggests a role as a delivery system for clusters
assembled on primary scaffold proteins. This was first demonstrated
in plant chloroplasts, in which [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound monothiol GrxS14 was found to rapidly and
quantitatively transfer its [Fe2S2] cluster
to apo plant Fdx with a second-order rate contant of 20 000
M–1 min–1 at 23 °C.[11] Subsequently, cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-Grx4 to apo-IscFdx in E. coli was demonstrated, although the rate constant was not determined.[28] Based on the CD studies shown in Figure 4, intact and quantitative cluster transfer from
[Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscFdx also occurs in A. vinelandii, with a second-order rate constant of 2100
M–1 min–1 at 23 °C.
This rate constant is 2–3 times larger than that reported for
co-chaperone-assisted [Fe2S2] cluster transfer
from IscU (800 M–1 min–1 at
23 °C),[7] indicating that Grx5 is a
viable intermediate carrier protein for delivering [Fe2S2] clusters assembled on IscU to apo-IscFdx.
Figure 4
Time course
of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-Grx5 (32 μM in [Fe2S2]2+ clusters) to apo-IscFdx (48 μM)
monitored by UV–visible CD spectroscopy at 23 °C . (A)
CD spectra recorded at 6, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 120, and 160 min after
adding [Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscFdx in 100 mM
Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, with 2 mM dithiothreitol. The arrows indicate
the direction of intensity change with increasing time at selected
wavelengths. Inset shows kinetic data for the cluster transfer measured
at 434 nm, and the solid line is a best-fit simulation to second-order
kinetics with a rate constant of 2100 M–1 min–1. (B) Simulated CD spectra corresponding to quantitative
[Fe2S2]2+ cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscFdx in 10% increments. Δε
values are based on the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster concentration, and the path length was 1 cm.
Time course
of cluster transfer from A. vinelandii [Fe2S2]-Grx5 (32 μM in [Fe2S2]2+ clusters) to apo-IscFdx (48 μM)
monitored by UV–visible CD spectroscopy at 23 °C . (A)
CD spectra recorded at 6, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 120, and 160 min after
adding [Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscFdx in 100 mM
Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, with 2 mM dithiothreitol. The arrows indicate
the direction of intensity change with increasing time at selected
wavelengths. Inset shows kinetic data for the cluster transfer measured
at 434 nm, and the solid line is a best-fit simulation to second-order
kinetics with a rate constant of 2100 M–1 min–1. (B) Simulated CD spectra corresponding to quantitative
[Fe2S2]2+ cluster transfer from [Fe2S2]-Grx5 to apo-IscFdx in 10% increments. Δε
values are based on the [Fe2S2]2+ cluster concentration, and the path length was 1 cm.Much work needs to be done to identify specific
cluster acceptor
proteins for [Fe2S2]2+ cluster-bound
forms of monothiolGrx’s. These could be other proposed carrier
proteins such as A-type and Nfu-type proteins and/or specific apo
Fe–S proteins and enzymes. Identifying the specificity of [Fe2S2] cluster-bound forms of monothiolGrx’s
with respect to acceptor proteins is under active investigation in
our laboratory. In addition, since IscU functions as a catalyst for
Fe–S cluster assembly,[30] it is clearly
important to develop a robust in vitro catalytic
system that includes the co-chaperones for investigating cluster assembly
on target proteins using Fe(II) and cysteine as the primary substrates.
Authors: Kala Chandramouli; Mihaela-Carmen Unciuleac; Sunil Naik; Dennis R Dean; Boi Hanh Huynh; Michael K Johnson Journal: Biochemistry Date: 2007-05-17 Impact factor: 3.162
Authors: Haoran Li; Daphne T Mapolelo; Nin N Dingra; Sunil G Naik; Nicholas S Lees; Brian M Hoffman; Pamela J Riggs-Gelasco; Boi Hanh Huynh; Michael K Johnson; Caryn E Outten Journal: Biochemistry Date: 2009-10-13 Impact factor: 3.162
Authors: Sibali Bandyopadhyay; Sunil G Naik; Ina P O'Carroll; Boi-Hanh Huynh; Dennis R Dean; Michael K Johnson; Patricia C Dos Santos Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2008-03-13 Impact factor: 5.157
Authors: Sylvain Boutigny; Avneesh Saini; Edward E K Baidoo; Natasha Yeung; Jay D Keasling; Gareth Butland Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2013-03-29 Impact factor: 5.157