Abstract

Iron is an essential cofactor, but it is also toxic at high levels. In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, the sensor glutaredoxin Grx4 guides the activity of the repressors Php4 and Fep1 to mediate a complex transcriptional response to iron deprivation: activation of Php4 and inactivation of Fep1 leads to inhibition of iron usage/storage, and to promotion of iron import, respectively. However, the molecular events ruling the activity of this double-branched pathway remained elusive. We show here that Grx4 incorporates a glutathione-containing iron-sulfur cluster, alone or forming a heterodimer with the BolA-like protein Fra2. Our genetic study demonstrates that Grx4-Fra2, but not Fep1 nor Php4, participates not only in iron starvation signaling but also in iron-related aerobic metabolism. Iron-containing Grx4 binds and inactivates the Php4 repressor; upon iron deprivation, the cluster in Grx4 is probably disassembled, the proteins dissociate, and Php4 accumulates at the nucleus and represses iron consumption genes. Fep1 is also an iron-containing protein, and the tightly bound iron is required for transcriptional repression. Our data suggest that the cluster-containing Grx4-Fra2 heterodimer constitutively binds to Fep1, and upon iron deprivation the disassembly of the iron cluster between Grx4 and Fra2 promotes reverse metal transfer from Fep1 to Grx4-Fra2, and de-repression of iron-import genes. Our genetic and biochemical study demonstrates that the glutaredoxin Grx4 independently governs the Php4 and Fep1 repressors through metal transfer. Whereas iron loss from Grx4 seems to be sufficient to release Php4 and allow its nuclear accumulation, total or partial disassembly of the Grx4-Fra2 cluster actively participates in iron-containing Fep1 activation by sequestering its iron and decreasing its interaction with promoters.

Highlights

  • Since iron (Fe) is essential and toxic, its uptake from the extracellular environment and its intracellular availability from a “disposable Fe pool” are tightly regulated

  • In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Fe starvation response is based on the activation of the positive transcription factors Aft1/2, and in post-transcriptional regulation of mRNA stability by the RNA-binding proteins Cth1/2

  • Fission yeast Grx4 is required for sensing Fe starvation In S. cerevisiae, the redundant proteins Grx3/4 regulate two important processes of cell survival and adaptation: delivery of Fe to proteins and regulation of the transcription factor Aft1, activator of a transcriptional response to Fe starvation [12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Since iron (Fe) is essential and toxic, its uptake from the extracellular environment and its intracellular availability from a “disposable Fe pool” are tightly regulated. All cell types display wide transcriptome changes upon Fe starvation These responses are triggered in very distinct ways in each organism, but the final gene expression programs are quite similar in essence: they are meant to temporally increase Fe import and decrease Fe storage and usage. When Fe is scarce, Php accumulates in the nucleus and represses transcription of genes activated by the Pho2/3/5 complex, acting as a transcriptional repressor [7]. These more than 80 repressed genes, according to microarray analysis [8], include those coding for the vacuole Fe importer Pcl, the Fe-sulfur (Fe-S) clustercontaining protein Sdh and the Fe-S cluster assembly protein Isa1 [1]. The only common element in the cascades of budding and fission yeast seems to be the Fe sensor glutaredoxin 4 (Fig. 1A)

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