Abstract

Recent studies of mutant mice with compromised ability to absorb dietary iron have identified involvement of two integral membrane proteins in the intestinal epithelial lining in iron uptake, a divalent metal ion transporter and a ferric reductase. The current study concerns the recombinant expression, purification, and initial spectroscopic characterization of a recombinant form of the human ferric reductase that was expressed and purified as the apoprotein from Escherichia coli. Reconstitution of the recombinant protein with ferriprotoporphyrin IX produced a red product with Soret (Fe3+, lambdamax 413.5 nm; Fe2+, lambdamax = 426 nm) and visible absorption maxima indicative of bisimidazole axial coordination. This observation was confirmed by electron paramagnetic resonance and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy. Titration of apo-Dcytb with ferriprotoporphyrin IX was consistent with the binding of two heme groups to the protein as predicted by the phylogenetic relationship of this protein to the cytochrome b561 family. Similar titrations and spectroscopic studies of two double variants of Dcytb, each lacking a pair of histidyl residues (H50 and H120 or H86 and H159) proposed on the basis of sequence alignment with other members of the cytochrome b561 family to provide axial ligands to bound heme, indicated that these variants were able to bind just one heme group each.

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