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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1327
    Keywords: Key words Recombinant horse apoferritin ; X-ray structure ; Stability ; Function
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract  The X-ray structure of recombinant horse L-chain (rL) apoferritin, solved at 2.0 Å resolution with a final R factor of 17.9%, gives evidence that the residue at position 93 in the sequence is a proline and not a leucine, as found in earlier sequencing studies. The structure is isomorphous with other apoferritin structures, and we thus draw particular attention to those structural features which can be related to the stability and function of the protein. Analysis of hydrogen bonding and salt bridge interactions shows that dimers and tetramers are the most stable molecular entities within the protein shell: a result confirming earlier biophysical experiments. The stability of horse rL apoferritin to both dissociation into subunits at acidic pH values and to complete unfolding in guanidine chloride solutions is compared with that of other apoferritins. This emphasizes the role played by the salt bridge in the stability of this protein family. The horse rL apoferritin is significantly more resistant to denaturation than horse spleen ferritin, which in turn is more resistant than any human rH apoferritins, even those for which a salt bridge is restored. Finally, this structure determination not only establishes that a preformed pocket exists in L-chain apoferritin, at a site known to be able to bind porphyrin, but also underlines the particular function of a cluster of glutamic acids (E53, E56, E57 and E60) located at the entrance of this porphyrin-binding pocket.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: X-ray protein crystallography ; structure determination ; anomalous scattering ; protein-porphyrin interaction ; metalloporphyrin demetalation ; multiple alignment ; structural comparison ; ferritin and bacterioferritin ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Crystallographic studies of L-chain horse spleen apoferritin (HSF) co-crystallized with Pt-hematoporphyrin IX and Sn-protoporphyrin IX have brought significant new insights into structure-function relationships in ferritins. Interactions of HSF with porphyrins are discussed. Structural results show that the nestling properties into HSF are dependent on the porphyrin moiety. (Only protoporphyrin IX significantly interacts with the protein, whereas hematoporphyrin IX does not.) These studies additionally point out the L-chain HSF ability to demetalate metalloporphyrins, a result which is of importance in looking at the iron storage properties of ferritins. In both compound investigated (whether the porphyrin reaches the binding site or not), the complexation appears to be concomitant with the extraction of the metal from the porphyrin.To analyze further the previous results, a three-dimensional alignment of ferritin sequences based on available crystallographic coordinates, including the present structures, is given. It confirms a high degree of homology between these members of the ferritin family and thus allows us to emphasize observed structural differences: 1) unlike L-chain HSF, H-chain human ferritin presents no preformed binding site; and 2) despite the absence of axial ligands, and due to the demetalation, L-chain HSF is able to host protoporphyrin at a similar location to that naturally found in bacterioferritin.
    Additional Material: 5 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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