On the evolutionary significance and metal-binding characteristics of a monolobal transferrin from Ciona intestinalis
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Edited by Elizabeth C. Theil, CHORI, Oakland, CA, and accepted by the Editorial Board January 2, 2008 (received for review May 29, 2007)
Abstract
Transferrins are a family of proteins that bind and transport Fe(III). Modern transferrins are typically bilobal and are believed to have evolved from an ancient gene duplication of a monolobal form. A novel monolobal transferrin, nicatransferrin (nicaTf), was identified in the primitive ascidian species Ciona intestinalis that possesses the characteristic features of the proposed ancestral Tf protein. In this work, nicaTf was expressed in Pichia pastoris. Extensive solution studies were performed on nicaTf, including UV-vis, fluorescence, CD, EPR and NMR spectroscopies, and electrospray time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The expressed protein is nonglycosylated, unlike the protein isolated from the organism. This property does not affect its ability to bind Fe(III). However, Fe(III)-bound nicaTf displays important spectral differences from other Fe(III)-bound transferrins, which are likely the consequence of differences in metal coordination. Coordination differences could also account for the weaker affinity of nicaTf for Fe(III) (log K = 18.5) compared with bilobal human serum transferrin (HsTf) (log K = 22.5 and 21.4). The Fe–nicaTf complex is not labile, as indicated by slow metal removal kinetics by the high-affinity chelator tiron at pH 7.4. The protein alternatively binds up to one equivalent of Ti(IV) or V(V), which suggests that it may transport nonferric metals. These solution studies provide insight into the structure and function of the primitive monolobal transferrin of C. intestinalis for comparison with higher order bilobal transferrins. They suggest that a major advantage for the evolution of modern transferrins, dominantly of bilobal form, is stronger Fe(III) affinity because of cooperativity.
Footnotes
- §To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ann.valentine{at}yale.edu
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Author contributions: A.D.T., C.W.P., B.L., R.P.D., and A.M.V. designed research; A.D.T., C.W.P., B.L., and R.P.D. performed research; A.D.T., C.W.P., B.L., and R.P.D. analyzed data; and A.D.T., C.W.P., and A.M.V. wrote the paper.
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↵*Present address: Department of Physics, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269.
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↵ †Present address: Nature Publishing Group, London N1 9XW, United Kingdom.
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↵ ‡Present address: Department of Chemistry, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article is a PNAS Direct Submission. E.C.T. is a guest editor invited by the Editorial Board.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0705037105/DC1.
- © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





