Reaction Paths of Iron Oxidation and Hydrolysis in Horse Spleen and Recombinant Human Ferritins

Abstract
UV-visible spectroscopy, electrode oximetry, and pH stat were used to study Fe(II) oxidation and hydrolysis in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) and recombinant human H-chain and L-chain ferritins (HuHF and HuLF). Appropriate test reactions and electrode responses were measured, establishing the reliability of oxygen electrode/pH stat for kinetics studies of iron uptake by ferritin. Stoichiometric ratios, Fe(II)/O-2 and H+/Fe(II), and rates of oxygen uptake and proton production were simultaneously measured as a function of iron loading of the protein. The data show a clear distinction between the diiron ferroxidase site and mineral surface catalyzed oxidation of Fe(II). The oxidation/hydrolysis reaction attributed to the ferroxidase site has been determined for the first time and is given by 2Fe(2+) + O-2 + 3H(2)O --> [Fe2O(OH)(2)](2+) + H2O2 + 2H(+) where [Fe2O(OH)(2)](2+) represents the hydrolyzed dinuclear iron(III) center postulated to be a mu-oxo-bridged species from UV spectrometric titration data and absorption band maxima. The transfer of iron from the ferroxidase site to the mineral core has been now established to be [Fe2O(OH)(2)](2+) + H2O --> 2FeOOH((core)) + 2H(+). Regeneration of protein ferroxidase activity with time is observed for both HoSF and HuHF, consistent with their having enzymatic properties, and is facilitated by higher pH (7.0) and temperature (37 degrees C) and by the presence of L-subunit and is complete within 10 min. In accord with previous studies, the mineral surface reaction is given by 4Fe(2+) + O-2 + 6H(2)O --> 4FeOOH((core)) + 8H(+). As the protein progressively acquires iron, oxidation/hydrolysis increasingly shifts from a ferroxidase site to a mineral surface based mechanism, decreasing the production of H2O2.