Christopher S. Stoj
University at Buffalo
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Alexander B. Taylor; Christopher S. Stoj; Lynn Ziegler; Daniel J. Kosman; P. John Hart
Fet3p is a multicopper-containing glycoprotein localized to the yeast plasma membrane that catalyzes the oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III). This ferrous iron oxidation is coupled to the reduction of O2 to H2O and is termed the ferroxidase reaction. Fet3p-produced Fe(III) is transferred to the permease Ftr1p for import into the cytosol. The posttranslational insertion of four copper ions into Fet3p is essential for its activity, thus linking copper and iron homeostasis. The mammalian ferroxidases ceruloplasmin and hephaestin are homologs of Fet3p. Loss of the Fe(II) oxidation catalyzed by these proteins results in a spectrum of pathological states, including death. Here, we present the structure of the Fet3p extracellular ferroxidase domain and compare it with that of human ceruloplasmin and other multicopper oxidases that are devoid of ferroxidase activity. The Fet3p structure delineates features that underlie the unique reactivity of this and homologous multicopper oxidases that support the essential trafficking of iron in diverse eukaryotic organisms. The findings are correlated with biochemical and physiological data to cross-validate the elements of Fet3p that define it as both a ferroxidase and cuprous oxidase.
FEBS Letters | 2003
Christopher S. Stoj; Daniel J. Kosman
The Fet3 protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mammalian ceruloplasmin are multicopper oxidases (MCO) that are required for iron homeostasis via their catalysis of the ferroxidase reaction, 4Fe2++O2+4H+→4Fe3++2H2O. The enzymes may play an essential role in copper homeostasis since they exhibit a strikingly similar kinetic activity towards Cu1+ as substrate. In contrast, laccase, an MCO that exhibits weak activity towards Fe2+, exhibits a similarly weak activity towards Cu1+. Kinetic analyses of the Fet3p reaction demonstrate that the ferroxidase and cuprous oxidase activities are due to the same electron transfer site on the enzyme. These two ferroxidases are fully competent kinetically to play a major role in maintaining the cuprous–cupric redox balance in aerobic organisms.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Xiaoli Shi; Christopher S. Stoj; Annette Romeo; Daniel J. Kosman; Zhiwu Zhu
Fre1p is a metalloreductase in the yeast plasma membrane that is essential to uptake of environmental Cu2+ and Fe3+. Fet3p is a multicopper oxidase in this membrane essential for high affinity iron uptake. In the uptake of Fe3+, Fre1p produces Fe2+ that is a substrate for Fet3p; the Fe3+ produced by Fet3p is a ligand for the iron permease, Ftr1p. Deletion of FET3 leads to iron deficiency; this deletion also causes a copper sensitivity not seen in wild type. Deletion of FTR1 leads to copper sensitivity also. Production in the ftr1Δ strain of an iron-uptake negative Ftr1p mutant, Ftr1p(RAGLA), suppressed this copper sensitivity. This Ftr1p mutant supported the plasma membrane targeting of active Fet3p that is blocked in the parental ftr1Δ strain. A ferroxidase-negative Fet3p did not suppress the copper sensitivity in a fet3Δ strain, although it supported the plasma membrane localization of the Fet3p·Ftr1p complex. Thus, loss of membrane-associated Fet3p oxidase activity correlated with copper sensitivity. Furthermore, in vitro Cu1+ was shown to be an excellent substrate for Fet3p. Last, the copper sensitivity of the fet3Δ strain was suppressed by co-deletion of FRE1, suggesting that the cytotoxic species was Cu1+. In contrast, deletion of CTR1 or of FET4 did not suppress the copper sensitivity in the fet3Δ strain; these genes encode the two major copper transporters in laboratory yeast strains. This result indicated that the apparent cuprous ion toxicity was not due to excess intracellular copper. These biochemical and physiologic results indicate that at least with respect to cuprous and ferrous ions, Fet3p can be considered a metallo-oxidase and appears to play an essential role in both iron and copper homeostasis in yeast. Its functional homologs, e.g. ceruloplasmin and hephaestin, could play a similar role in mammals.
Biochemistry | 2008
Anthony J. Augustine; Mads Emil Kragh; Ritimukta Sarangi; Satoshi Fujii; Barry D. Liboiron; Christopher S. Stoj; Daniel J. Kosman; Keith O. Hodgson; Britt Hedman; Edward I. Solomon
The multicopper oxidases catalyze the 4e- reduction of O2 to H2O coupled to the 1e- oxidation of 4 equiv of substrate. This activity requires four Cu atoms, including T1, T2, and coupled binuclear T3 sites. The T2 and T3 sites form a trinuclear cluster (TNC) where O2 is reduced. The T1 is coupled to the TNC through a T1-Cys-His-T3 electron transfer (ET) pathway. In this study the two T3 Cu coordinating His residues which lie in this pathway in Fet3 have been mutated, H483Q, H483C, H485Q, and H485C, to study how perturbation at the TNC impacts the T1 Cu site. Spectroscopic methods, in particular resonance Raman (rR), show that the change from His to Gln to Cys increases the covalency of the T1 Cu-S Cys bond and decreases its redox potential. This study of T1-TNC interactions is then extended to Rhus vernicifera laccase where a number of well-defined species including the catalytically relevant native intermediate (NI) can be trapped for spectroscopic study. The T1 Cu-S covalency and potential do not change in these species relative to resting oxidized enzyme, but interestingly the differences in the structure of the TNC in these species do lead to changes in the T1 Cu rR spectrum. This helps to confirm that vibrations in the cysteine side chain of the T1 Cu site and the protein backbone couple to the Cu-S vibration. These changes in the side chain and backbone provide a possible mechanism for regulating intramolecular T1 to TNC ET in NI and partially reduced enzyme forms for efficient turnover.
Biochemistry | 2006
Christopher S. Stoj; Anthony J. Augustine; Lynn Zeigler; Edward I. Solomon; Daniel J. Kosman
Fet3p is a multicopper oxidase (MCO) that functions together with the iron permease, Ftr1p, to support high-affinity Fe uptake in yeast. Fet3p is a ferroxidase that, like ceruloplasmin and hephaestin, couples the oxidation of 4 equiv of Fe(II) to the reduction of O2 to 2 H2O. The ferrous iron specificity of this subclass of MCO proteins has not been delineated by rigorous structure-function analysis. Here the crystal structure of Fet3p has been used as a template to identify the amino acid residues that confer this substrate specificity and then to quantify the contributions they make to this specific reactivity by thermodynamic and kinetic analyses. In terms of the Marcus theory of outer-sphere electron transfer, we show here that D283, E185, and D409 in Fet3p provide a Fe(II) binding site that actually favors ferric iron; this site thus reduces the reduction potential of the bound Fe(II) in comparison to that of aqueous ferrous iron, providing a thermodynamically more robust driving force for electron transfer. In addition, E185 and D409 constitute parts of the electron-transfer pathway from the bound Fe(II) to the proteins type 1 Cu(II). This electronic matrix coupling relies on H-bonds from the carboxylate OD2 atom of each residue to the NE2 NH group of the two histidine ligands at the type 1 Cu site. These two acidic residues and this H-bond network appear to distinguish a fungal ferroxidase from a fungal laccase since the specificity that Fet3p has for Fe(II) is completely lost in a Fet3pE185A/D409A mutant. Indeed, this double mutant functions kinetically better as a laccase, albeit a relatively inefficient one.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Christopher S. Stoj; Anthony J. Augustine; Edward I. Solomon; Daniel J. Kosman
The Fet3 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a multicopper oxidase with specificity toward Fe(II) and Cu(I). Fet3p turnover of Fe(II) supports high affinity iron uptake across the yeast plasma membrane, whereas its turnover of Cu(I) contributes to copper resistance in yeast. The structure of Fet3p has been used to identify possible amino acid residues responsible for this proteins reactivity with Cu(I), and structure-function analyses have confirmed this assignment. Fet3p Met345 is required for the enzymes reactivity toward Cu(I). Although the Fet3pM345A mutant exhibits wild type spectral and electrochemical behavior, the kinetic constants for Cu(I) turnover and for single-turnover electron transfer from Cu(I) to the enzyme are significantly reduced. The specificity constant with Cu(I) as substrate is reduced by one-fifth, whereas the electron transfer rate from Cu(I) is reduced 50-fold. This mutation has little effect on the reactivity toward Fe(II), indicating that Met345 contributes specifically to Fet3p reactivity with the cuprous ion. These kinetic defects render the Fet3pM345A unable to support wild type cellular copper resistance, suggesting that there is a finely tuned copper redox balance at the yeast plasma membrane.
Accounts of Chemical Research | 2007
Liliana Quintanar; Christopher S. Stoj; Alexander B. Taylor; P. John Hart; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007
Anthony J. Augustine; Liliana Quintanar; Christopher S. Stoj; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon
Biochemistry | 2005
Liliana Quintanar; Christopher S. Stoj; Tzu-Pin Wang; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon
Encyclopedia of Inorganic and Bioinorganic Chemistry | 2011
Christopher S. Stoj; Daniel J. Kosman
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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