Issue 22, 2005

Formation of protein-coated iron minerals

Abstract

The ability of iron to cycle between Fe2+ and Fe3+ forms has led to the evolution, in different forms, of several iron-containing protein cofactors that are essential for a wide variety of cellular processes, to the extent that virtually all cells require iron for survival and prosperity. The redox properties of iron, however, also mean that this metal is potentially highly toxic and this, coupled with the extreme insolubility of Fe3+, presents the cell with the significant problem of how to maintain this essential metal in a safe and bioavailable form. This has been overcome through the evolution of proteins capable of reversibly storing iron in the form of a Fe3+ mineral. For several decades the ferritins have been synonymous with the function of iron storage. Within this family are subfamilies of mammalian, plant and bacterial ferritins which are all composed of 24 subunits assembled to form an essentially spherical protein with a central cavity in which the mineral is laid down. In the past few years it has become clear that other proteins, belonging to the family of DNA-binding proteins from starved cells (the Dps family), which are oligomers of 12 subunits, and to the frataxin family, which may contain up to 48 subunits, are also able to lay down a Fe3+ mineral core. Here we present an overview of the formation of protein-coated iron minerals, with particular emphasis on the structures of the protein coats and the mechanisms by which they promote core formation. We show on the one hand that significant mechanistic similarities exist between structurally dissimilar proteins, while on the other that relatively small structural differences between otherwise similar proteins result in quite dramatic mechanistic differences.

Graphical abstract: Formation of protein-coated iron minerals

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
29 Apr 2005
Accepted
03 Jun 2005
First published
29 Jun 2005

Dalton Trans., 2005, 3597-3610

Formation of protein-coated iron minerals

A. Lewin, G. R. Moore and N. E. Le Brun, Dalton Trans., 2005, 3597 DOI: 10.1039/B506071K

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