Structure and Mechanism of the Human FE-S Cluster Assembly Complex

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $290,301 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Metal ions are essential to life as they augment amino acid protein chemistry and thereby catalyze many difficult biological reactions. As “free” metal ions are toxic and indiscriminately reactive, critical protein systems have evolved to sequester, chaperone, and regulate metal ion concentrations. Defects in these systems lead to metal ion metabolic disease and result in cellular, tissue, and systemic pathology. The iron-sulfur cluster assembly pathway contains a conserved set of metallochaperone proteins that recognize and insert Fe-S clusters into apo metalloproteins. We determined the first crystal structure for the NFS1-ISD11-ACP cysteine desulfurase, which is a central enzyme in this pathway that is also implicated in providing sulfur for molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis and tRNA modifications. Interestingly, three distinct interchangeable α2β22 architectures are now known for the cysteine desulfurase complex that have superimposable protomers but distinct protein-protein interactions. In this proposal, we aim to investigate the functional relationship between these architectures, elucidate mechanistic details for sulfur transfer to different acceptor proteins and for Fe-S cluster assembly, and provide new insight into the regulatory control mechanisms for human Fe-S cluster biosynthesis. This fundamental research will establish a framework for emerging genetic results and discoveries and provide a basis for understanding defects in iron-sulfur cluster metabolism relevant to human health and disease.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10799577
Project number
5R01GM096100-12
Recipient
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
DAVID P BARONDEAU
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$290,301
Award type
5
Project period
2011-09-01 → 2026-03-31