Publication | Open Access
Mössbauer studies of beef heart aconitase: evidence for facile interconversions of iron-sulfur clusters.
180
Citations
9
References
1982
Year
Iron MetabolismMagnetic ResonanceMolecular BiologyIron-sulfur ClustersBeef Heart AconitaseRedox BiologyMagnetismElectron Paramagnetic ResonanceMossbauer SpectroscopyBiochemistryActive SiteMetabolomicsNatural SciencesMetalloproteinPhysiologyEpr SpectroscopyMössbauer StudiesMetabolismMedicineMeat Science
Beef heart aconitase, isolated under aerobic conditions, has been studied with Mössbauer and EPR spectroscopy. In the oxidized state, the enzyme exhibits an EPR signal at g = 2.01. The Mössbauer data show that this signal is associated with a 3Fe cluster. In dithionite-reduced aconitase, the 3Fe cluster, probably of the [3Fe-3S] type, is in a paramagnetic state of interger electronic spin (S = 2); the Mössbauer spectra exhibit al the unique features reported for proteins with 3Fe clusters. On activation of aconitase with ferrous ion, the paramagnetic 3Fe cluster of dithionite-reduced enzyme is converted into a diamagnetic (S = 0) form. Activation studies with iron enriched in either 27 Fe or 56 Fe suggest that activation transforms the 3Fe cluster into a center that has a [4Fe-4S] core. This conclusion is supported by the observation that EPR signals characteristic of reduced [4Fe-4S] clusters can be elicited under appropriate conditions. It has frequently been assumed that the activation of aconitase with Fe2+ produces an active site containing a single ferrous ion. The data reported here suggest that a ferrous ion is used to rebuild a [4Fe-4S] cluster.
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