1998
DOI: 10.1021/bi980355j
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Two High-Resolution Crystal Structures of the Recombinant N-Lobe of Human Transferrin Reveal a Structural Change Implicated in Iron Release,

Abstract: The N-lobe of human serum transferrin (hTF/2N) has been expressed in baby hamster kidney cells and crystallized in both orthorhombic (P212121) and tetragonal (P41212) space groups. Both crystal forms diffract to high resolution (1.6 and 1.8 A, respectively) and have been solved by molecular replacement. Subsequent refinement resulted in final models for the structure of hTF/2N that had crystallographic R-factors of 18.1 and 19.7% for the two crystal forms, respectively; these models represent the highest-resol… Show more

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Cited by 241 publications
(306 citation statements)
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“…Nevertheless, in both proteins, proton-assisted carbonate loss seems to be the indispensable trigger for iron release [13]. This is confirmed by an XÂąray diffraction study on the N-site of serum-transferrin [14]. With serum-transferrin, the release of the metal from the N-site involves a single slow proton-transfer reaction which we ascribed to an acid-base reaction occurring on the Hist ligand (Eqn 2) and probably controlled by the change of conformation from close to open occurring upon iron loss [12,16].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Nevertheless, in both proteins, proton-assisted carbonate loss seems to be the indispensable trigger for iron release [13]. This is confirmed by an XÂąray diffraction study on the N-site of serum-transferrin [14]. With serum-transferrin, the release of the metal from the N-site involves a single slow proton-transfer reaction which we ascribed to an acid-base reaction occurring on the Hist ligand (Eqn 2) and probably controlled by the change of conformation from close to open occurring upon iron loss [12,16].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…is too fast to be analysed and, the rates and amplitudes of all the other observed kinetic processes are independent of the CO 2 partial pressures. It was, therefore, assumed that this fast phenomenon may describe protonassisted decarbonation of the protein in acidic media, because this decarbonation is a prerequisite for iron release [13,14]. The reciprocal relaxation time equations associated with Eqn (10), the second kinetic process of Fig.…”
Section: The First Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Carbonate is synergistic for iron binding to transferrin (33), and a low pH crystal structure suggests a role for bound carbonate in the initiation of iron release (34). In Class I FbpAs (hFbpA and nFbpA), phosphate and the two conserved Tyr residues form an iron half-site that is proposed to bind iron before forming a closed holo structure (32).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Iron in the ferric form is bound to hTF in plasma at neutral pH and transported into cells where it is then released to an unknown chelator in the acidic environment of the endosome. A large conformational change between the apo-and iron-bound forms of the N-lobe of hTF (hTF/2N) has been demonstrated by X-ray crystallographic analysis [4,5]. When iron is released, the two domains of this lobe rotate 63°around a central hinge leading to an 'open' conformation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%