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Dive into the research topics where Alok Pandey is active.

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Featured researches published by Alok Pandey.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Frataxin Directly Stimulates Mitochondrial Cysteine Desulfurase by Exposing Substrate-binding Sites, and a Mutant Fe-S Cluster Scaffold Protein with Frataxin-bypassing Ability Acts Similarly

Alok Pandey; Donna M. Gordon; Jayashree Pain; Timothy L. Stemmler; Andrew Dancis; Debkumar Pain

Background: The cysteine desulfurase Nfs1 provides sulfur for Fe-S cluster biogenesis in mitochondria. Results: Frataxin or a mutant Fe-S scaffold protein (Isu1Sup) with frataxin-bypassing ability stimulates cysteine binding to Nfs1. Conclusion: Frataxin or Isu1Sup likely induces a conformational change in Nfs1, exposing substrate-binding sites. Significance: Data presented here may help develop a drug for treating Friedreich ataxia associated with frataxin deficiency. For iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster synthesis in mitochondria, the sulfur is derived from the amino acid cysteine by the cysteine desulfurase activity of Nfs1. The enzyme binds the substrate cysteine in the pyridoxal phosphate-containing site, and a persulfide is formed on the active site cysteine in a manner depending on the accessory protein Isd11. The persulfide is then transferred to the scaffold Isu, where it combines with iron to form the Fe-S cluster intermediate. Frataxin is implicated in the process, although it is unclear where and how, and deficiency causes Friedreich ataxia. Using purified proteins and isolated mitochondria, we show here that the yeast frataxin homolog (Yfh1) directly and specifically stimulates cysteine binding to Nfs1 by exposing substrate-binding sites. This novel function of frataxin does not require iron, Isu1, or Isd11. Once bound to Nfs1, the substrate cysteine is the source of the Nfs1 persulfide, but this step is independent of frataxin and strictly dependent on Isd11. Recently, a point mutation in Isu1 was found to bypass many frataxin functions. The data presented here show that the Isu1 suppressor mimics the frataxin effects on Nfs1, explaining the bypassing activity. We propose a regulatory mechanism for the Nfs1 persulfide-forming activity. Specifically, at least two separate conformational changes must occur in the enzyme for optimum activity as follows: one is mediated by frataxin interaction that exposes the “buried” substrate-binding sites, and the other is mediated by Isd11 interaction that brings the bound substrate cysteine and the active site cysteine in proximity for persulfide formation.


Biochemical Journal | 2012

Persulfide formation on mitochondrial cysteine desulfurase: enzyme activation by a eukaryote-specific interacting protein and Fe-S cluster synthesis.

Alok Pandey; Ramesh Golla; Heeyong Yoon; Andrew Dancis; Debkumar Pain

Cysteine desulfurases abstract sulfur from the substrate cysteine, generate a covalent persulfide on the active site cysteine of the enzyme, and then donate the persulfide sulfur to various recipients such as Fe-S clusters. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Nfs1p protein is the only known cysteine desulfurase, and it forms a complex with Isd11p (Nfs1p·Isd11p). Both of these proteins are found primarily in mitochondria and both are essential for cell viability. In the present study we show, using the results of experiments with isolated mitochondria and purified proteins, that Isd11p is required for the cysteine desulfurase activity of Nfs1p. Whereas Nfs1p by itself was inactive, the Nfs1p·Isd11p complex formed persulfide and was active as a cysteine desulfurase. In the absence of Isd11p, Nfs1p was able to bind the substrate cysteine but failed to form a persulfide. Addition of Isd11p allowed Nfs1p with bound substrate to generate a covalent persulfide. We suggest that Isd11p induces an activating conformational change in Nfs1p to bring the bound substrate and the active site cysteine in proximity for persulfide formation. Thus mitochondrial Nfs1p is different from bacterial cysteine desulfurases that are active in the absence of accessory proteins. Isd11p may serve to regulate cysteine desulfurase activity in mitochondria.


Biochemical Journal | 2014

Frataxin-bypassing Isu1: characterization of the bypass activity in cells and mitochondria

Heeyong Yoon; Simon A. B. Knight; Alok Pandey; Jayashree Pain; Yan Zhang; Debkumar Pain; Andrew Dancis

Frataxin is a conserved mitochondrial protein, and deficiency underlies the neurodegenerative disease Friedreichs ataxia. Frataxin interacts with the core machinery for Fe-S cluster assembly in mitochondria. Recently we reported that in frataxin-deleted yeast strains, a spontaneously occurring mutation in one of two genes encoding redundant Isu scaffold proteins, bypassed the mutant phenotypes. In the present study we created strains expressing a single scaffold protein, either Isu1 or the bypass mutant M107I Isu1. Our results show that in the frataxin-deletion strain expressing the bypass mutant Isu1, cell growth, Fe-S cluster protein activities, haem proteins and iron homoeostasis were restored to normal or close to normal. The bypass effects were not mediated by changes in Isu1 expression level. The persulfide-forming activity of the cysteine desulfurase was diminished in the frataxin deletion (∆yfh1 ISU1) and was improved by expression of the bypass Isu1 (∆yfh1 M107I ISU1). The addition of purified bypass M107I Isu1 protein to a ∆yfh1 lysate conferred similar enhancement of cysteine desulfurase as did frataxin, suggesting that this effect contributed to the bypass mechanism. Fe-S cluster-forming activity in isolated mitochondria was stimulated by the bypass Isu1, albeit at a lower rate. The rescuing effects of the bypass Isu1 point to ways that the core defects in Friedreichs ataxia mitochondria can be restored.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Fe-S cluster biogenesis in isolated mammalian mitochondria: coordinated use of persulfide sulfur and iron, and requirements for GTP, NADH, and ATP

Alok Pandey; Jayashree Pain; Arnab Ghosh; Andrew Dancis; Debkumar Pain

Background: Fe-S cluster assembly in mitochondria involves generation of an activated form of sulfur called persulfide. Results: A novel experimental system tracks new Fe-S cluster synthesis in isolated mammalian mitochondria. Conclusion: The use of persulfide sulfur and iron for Fe-S cluster biogenesis is tightly coordinated by processes requiring GTP, NADH, and ATP. Significance: These cofactor targets can now be defined. Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential cofactors, and mitochondria contain several Fe-S proteins, including the [4Fe-4S] protein aconitase and the [2Fe-2S] protein ferredoxin. Fe-S cluster assembly of these proteins occurs within mitochondria. Although considerable data exist for yeast mitochondria, this biosynthetic process has never been directly demonstrated in mammalian mitochondria. Using [35S]cysteine as the source of sulfur, here we show that mitochondria isolated from Cath.A-derived cells, a murine neuronal cell line, can synthesize and insert new Fe-35S clusters into aconitase and ferredoxins. The process requires GTP, NADH, ATP, and iron, and hydrolysis of both GTP and ATP is necessary. Importantly, we have identified the 35S-labeled persulfide on the NFS1 cysteine desulfurase as a genuine intermediate en route to Fe-S cluster synthesis. In physiological settings, the persulfide sulfur is released from NFS1 and transferred to a scaffold protein, where it combines with iron to form an Fe-S cluster intermediate. We found that the release of persulfide sulfur from NFS1 requires iron, showing that the use of iron and sulfur for the synthesis of Fe-S cluster intermediates is a highly coordinated process. The release of persulfide sulfur also requires GTP and NADH, probably mediated by a GTPase and a reductase, respectively. ATP, a cofactor for a multifunctional Hsp70 chaperone, is not required at this step. The experimental system described here may help to define the biochemical basis of diseases that are associated with impaired Fe-S cluster biogenesis in mitochondria, such as Friedreich ataxia.


Mitochondrion | 2012

Identification of a Nfs1p-bound persulfide intermediate in Fe–S cluster synthesis by intact mitochondria

Alok Pandey; Heeyong Yoon; Elise R. Lyver; Andrew Dancis; Debkumar Pain

Cysteine desulfurases generate a covalent persulfide intermediate from cysteine, and this activated form of sulfur is essential for the synthesis of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters. In yeast mitochondria, there is a complete machinery for Fe-S cluster synthesis, including a cysteine desulfurase, Nfs1p. Here we show that following supplementation of isolated mitochondria with [(35)S]cysteine, a radiolabeled persulfide could be detected on Nfs1p. The persulfide persisted under conditions that did not permit Fe-S cluster formation, such as nucleotide and/or iron depletion of mitochondria. By contrast, under permissive conditions, the radiolabeled Nfs1p persulfide was greatly reduced and radiolabeled aconitase was formed, indicating transfer of persulfide to downstream Fe-S cluster recipients. Nfs1p in mitochondria was found to be relatively more resistant to inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) as compared with a prokaryotic cysteine desulfurase. Mitochondria treated with NEM (1 mM) formed the persulfide on Nfs1p but failed to generate Fe-S clusters on aconitase, likely due to inactivation of downstream recipient(s) of the Nfs1p persulfide. Thus the Nfs1p-bound persulfide as described here represents a precursor en route to Fe-S cluster synthesis in mitochondria.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Turning Saccharomyces cerevisiae into a Frataxin-Independent Organism.

Heeyong Yoon; Simon A. B. Knight; Alok Pandey; Jayashree Pain; Serdar Turkarslan; Debkumar Pain; Andrew Dancis

Frataxin (Yfh1 in yeast) is a conserved protein and deficiency leads to the neurodegenerative disease Friedreich’s ataxia. Frataxin is a critical protein for Fe-S cluster assembly in mitochondria, interacting with other components of the Fe-S cluster machinery, including cysteine desulfurase Nfs1, Isd11 and the Isu1 scaffold protein. Yeast Isu1 with the methionine to isoleucine substitution (M141I), in which the E. coli amino acid is inserted at this position, corrected most of the phenotypes that result from lack of Yfh1 in yeast. This suppressor Isu1 behaved as a genetic dominant. Furthermore frataxin-bypass activity required a completely functional Nfs1 and correlated with the presence of efficient scaffold function. A screen of random Isu1 mutations for frataxin-bypass activity identified only M141 substitutions, including Ile, Cys, Leu, or Val. In each case, mitochondrial Nfs1 persulfide formation was enhanced, and mitochondrial Fe-S cluster assembly was improved in the absence of frataxin. Direct targeting of the entire E. coli IscU to ∆yfh1 mitochondria also ameliorated the mutant phenotypes. In contrast, expression of IscU with the reverse substitution i.e. IscU with Ile to Met change led to worsening of the ∆yfh1 phenotypes, including severely compromised growth, increased sensitivity to oxygen, deficiency in Fe-S clusters and heme, and impaired iron homeostasis. A bioinformatic survey of eukaryotic Isu1/prokaryotic IscU database entries sorted on the amino acid utilized at the M141 position identified unique groupings, with virtually all of the eukaryotic scaffolds using Met, and the preponderance of prokaryotic scaffolds using other amino acids. The frataxin-bypassing amino acids Cys, Ile, Leu, or Val, were found predominantly in prokaryotes. This amino acid position 141 is unique in Isu1, and the frataxin-bypass effect likely mimics a conserved and ancient feature of the prokaryotic Fe-S cluster assembly machinery.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Isd11p Protein Activates the Mitochondrial Cysteine Desulfurase Nfs1p Protein

Alok Pandey; Heeyong Yoon; Elise R. Lyver; Andrew Dancis; Debkumar Pain

Background: In yeast, Nfs1p is the only known cysteine desulfurase in mitochondria. Results: Nfs1p is completely inactive on its own and requires an accessory protein, Isd11p, for activity. Conclusion: Binding of Isd11p may induce a conformational change in Nfs1p, thereby activating the enzyme. Significance: Isd11p-mediated activation of Nfs1p is critical for vital cellular and mitochondrial functions. Cysteine desulfurases perform pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent desulfuration of cysteine. The key steps of the enzymatic cycle include substrate binding to PLP, formation of a covalent persulfide intermediate at the active site cysteine, and transfer of sulfur to recipients for use in various metabolic pathways. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cysteine desulfurase Nfs1p and an accessory protein, Isd11p, are found primarily in mitochondria, and both are essential for cell viability. Although cysteine desulfurases are conserved from bacteria to humans, Isd11p is found only in eukaryotes and not in prokaryotes. Here we show that Isd11p activates Nfs1p. The enzyme without Isd11p was inactive and did not form the [35S]persulfide intermediate from the substrate [35S]cysteine. Addition of Isd11p to inactive Nfs1p induced formation of the persulfide. Remarkably, in a two-step assay, [35S]cysteine could be bound to the inactive Nfs1p in a PLP-dependent manner, and the enzyme could be subsequently induced to form the persulfide by addition of Isd11p. A mutant form of Isd11p with the 15LYK17 motif changed to 15AAA17 was able to bind but failed to activate Nfs1p, thus separating these two functions of Isd11p. Finally, compared with Nfs1p with or without the bound Isd11p mutant, the Nfs1p·Isd11p complex was more resistant to inactivation by an alkylating agent. On the basis of these novel findings, we propose that interaction of Isd11p with Nfs1p activates the enzyme by inducing a conformational change, thereby promoting formation of the persulfide intermediate at the active site cysteine. Such a conformational change may protect the active site cysteine from alkylating agents.


Chemistry & Biology | 2018

Mitochondria Export Sulfur Species Required for Cytosolic tRNA Thiolation

Alok Pandey; Jayashree Pain; Nathaniel Dziuba; Ashutosh K. Pandey; Andrew Dancis; Paul A. Lindahl; Debkumar Pain

In eukaryotes, mitochondria have been hypothesized to generate sulfur species required for tRNA thiolation in the cytosol, although no direct evidence thus far exists. Here we have detected these sulfur species, making use of our observation that isolated yeast cytosol alone is unable to thiolate tRNAs but can do so upon addition of mitochondria. Mitochondria were found to utilize the cysteine desulfurase Nfs1 to produce sulfur-containing species with masses ranging from 700 to 1,100 Da. Mitochondria exported these species via the Atm1 transporter in the inner membrane. Once exported to the cytosol, these sulfur species promoted cytosolic tRNA thiolation with no further requirement of mitochondria. Furthermore, we found that the Isu1/2 scaffolds but not the Ssq1 chaperone of the mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster machinery were required for cytosolic tRNA thiolation, and thus the sulfur utilization pathway bifurcates at the Isu1/2 site for intra-organellar use in mitochondria or export to the cytosol.


Mitochondrion | 2017

Cysteine desulfurase is regulated by phosphorylation of Nfs1 in yeast mitochondria

Agostinho G. Rocha; Simon A. B. Knight; Alok Pandey; Heeyong Yoon; Jayashree Pain; Debkumar Pain; Andrew Dancis

The cysteine desulfurase Nfs1/Isd11 uses the amino acid cysteine as the substrate and its activity is absolutely required for contributing persulfide sulfur to the essential process of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster assembly in mitochondria. Here we describe a novel regulatory process involving phosphorylation of Nfs1 in mitochondria. Phosphorylation enhanced cysteine desulfurase activity, while dephosphorylation decreased its activity. Nfs1 phosphopeptides were identified, and the corresponding phosphosite mutants showed impaired persulfide formation. Nfs1 pull down from mitochondria recovered an associated kinase activity, and Yck2, a kinase present in the pull down, was able to phosphorylate Nfs1 in vitro and stimulate cysteine desulfurase activity. Yck2 exhibited an eclipsed distribution in the mitochondrial matrix, although other cellular localizations have been previously described. Mitochondria lacking the Yck2 protein kinase (∆yck2) showed less phosphorylating activity for Nfs1. Compared with wild-type mitochondria, ∆yck2 mitochondria revealed slower persulfide formation on Nfs1 consistent with a role of Yck2 in regulating mitochondrial cysteine desulfurase activity. We propose that Nfs1 phosphorylation may provide a means of rapid adaptation to increased metabolic demand for sulfur and Fe-S clusters within mitochondria.


Data in Brief | 2017

Nfs1 cysteine desulfurase protein complexes and phosphorylation sites as assessed by mass spectrometry

Agostinho G. Rocha; Simon A. B. Knight; Alok Pandey; Heeyong Yoon; Jayashree Pain; Debkumar Pain; Andrew Dancis

Fe-S clusters are cofactors that participate in diverse and essential biological processes. Mitochondria contain a complete machinery for Fe-S cluster assembly. Cysteine desulfurase (Nfs1) is required generation of a form of activated sulfur and is essential for the initial Fe-S cluster assembly step. Using mass-spectometry we identified proteins that were copurified with Nfs1 using a pull-down strategy, including a novel protein kinase. Furthermore, we were able to identify phosphorylation sites on the Nfs1 protein. These data and analyses support the research article “Cysteine desulfurase is regulated by phosphorylation of Nfs1 in yeast mitochondria” by Rocha et al. (in press) [1].

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Andrew Dancis

University of Pennsylvania

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Heeyong Yoon

University of Pennsylvania

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Elise R. Lyver

University of Pennsylvania

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Donna M. Gordon

Mississippi State University

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