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Iron Oxidation in Escherichia coli Bacterioferritin Ferroxidase Centre, a Site Designed to React Rapidly with H2 O2 but Slowly with O2.

Jacob PullinMichael T WilsonMartin ClémanceyGeneviève BlondinJustin M BradleyGeoffrey R MooreNick E Le BrunMarina LučićJonathan A R WorrallDimitri A Svistunenko
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Both O2 and H2 O2 can oxidize iron at the ferroxidase center (FC) of Escherichia coli bacterioferritin (EcBfr) but mechanistic details of the two reactions need clarification. UV/Vis, EPR, and Mössbauer spectroscopies have been used to follow the reactions when apo-EcBfr, pre-loaded anaerobically with Fe2+ , was exposed to O2 or H2 O2 . We show that O2 binds di-Fe2+ FC reversibly, two Fe2+ ions are oxidized in concert and a H2 O2 molecule is formed and released to the solution. This peroxide molecule further oxidizes another di-Fe2+ FC, at a rate circa 1000 faster than O2 , ensuring an overall 1:4 stoichiometry of iron oxidation by O2 . Initially formed Fe3+ can further react with H2 O2 (producing protein bound radicals) but relaxes within seconds to an H2 O2 -unreactive di-Fe3+ form. The data obtained suggest that the primary role of EcBfr in vivo may be to detoxify H2 O2 rather than sequester iron.
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