Publication | Closed Access
Frataxin Acts as an Iron Chaperone Protein to Modulate Mitochondrial Aconitase Activity
368
Citations
25
References
2004
Year
Reductive StressRedox SignalingBiochemistryMitochondrial FunctionMedicineNatural SciencesPhysiologyMolecular BiologyFrataxin ActsMitochondrial Aconitase ActivityEnzyme ReactivationIron Chaperone ProteinMetabolismProteomicsRedox BiologyOxidative Stress
Numerous degenerative disorders are associated with elevated levels of prooxidants and declines in mitochondrial aconitase activity. Deficiency in the mitochondrial iron-binding protein frataxin results in diminished activity of various mitochondrial iron-sulfur proteins including aconitase. We found that aconitase can undergo reversible citrate-dependent modulation in activity in response to pro-oxidants. Frataxin interacted with aconitase in a citrate-dependent fashion, reduced the level of oxidant-induced inactivation, and converted inactive [3Fe-4S]1+ enzyme to the active [4Fe-4S]2+ form of the protein. Thus, frataxin is an iron chaperone protein that protects the aconitase [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster from disassembly and promotes enzyme reactivation.
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