Structure of a Zinc Porphyrin-Substituted Bacterioferritin and Photophysical Properties of Iron Reduction.
Benavides, B.S., Valandro, S., Cioloboc, D., Taylor, A.B., Schanze, K.S., Kurtz Jr., D.M.(2020) Biochemistry 59: 1618-1629
- PubMed: 32283930
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.9b01103
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:
6P8K, 6P8L - PubMed Abstract:
The iron storage protein bacterioferritin (Bfr) binds up to 12 hemes b at specific sites in its protein shell. The heme b can be substituted with the photosensitizer Zn(II)-protoporphyrin IX (ZnPP), and photosensitized reductive iron release from the ferric oxyhydroxide {[FeO(OH)] n } core inside the ZnPP-Bfr protein shell was demonstrated [Cioloboc, D., et al. (2018) Biomacromolecules 19 , 178-187]. This report describes the X-ray crystal structure of ZnPP-Bfr and the effects of loaded iron on the photophysical properties of the ZnPP. The crystal structure of ZnPP-Bfr shows a unique six-coordinate zinc in the ZnPP with two axial methionine sulfur ligands. Steady state and transient ultraviolet-visible absorption and luminescence spectroscopies show that irradiation with light overlapping the Soret absorption causes oxidation of ZnPP to the cation radical ZnPP •+ only when the ZnPP-Bfr is loaded with [FeO(OH)] n . Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy shows that this photooxidation occurs from the singlet excited state ( 1 ZnPP*) on the picosecond time scale and is consistent with two oxidizing populations of Fe 3+ , which do not appear to involve the ferroxidase center iron. We propose that [FeO(OH)] n clusters at or near the inner surface of the protein shell are responsible for ZnPP photooxidation. Hopping of the photoinjected electrons through the [FeO(OH)] n would effectively cause migration of Fe 2+ through the inner cavity to pores where it exits the protein. Reductive iron mobilization is presumed to be a physiological function of Bfrs. The phototriggered Fe 3+ reduction could be used to identify the sites of iron mobilization within the Bfr protein shell.
Organizational Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78249, United States.