Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Iron utilization by bacteria in aerobic environments involves uptake as a ferric chelate from the environment, followed by reduction to the ferrous form. Ferric iron reduction is poorly understood in most bacterial species. Here, we identified
Bradyrhizobium japonicum frcB
(bll3557) as a gene adjacent to, and coregulated with, the
pyoR
gene (blr3555) encoding the outer membrane receptor for transport of a ferric pyoverdine. FrcB is a membrane-bound, diheme protein, characteristic of eukaryotic ferric reductases. Heme was essential for FrcB stability, as were conserved histidine residues in the protein that likely coordinate the heme moieties. Expression of the
frcB
gene in
Escherichia coli
conferred ferric reductase activity on those cells. Furthermore, reduced heme in purified FrcB was oxidized by ferric iron
in vitro
.
B. japonicum
cells showed inducible ferric reductase activity in iron-limited cells that was diminished in an
frcB
mutant. Steady-state levels of
frcB
mRNA were strongly induced under iron-limiting conditions, but transcript levels were low and unresponsive to iron in an
irr
mutant lacking the global iron response transcriptional regulator Irr. Thus, Irr positively controls the
frcB
gene. FrcB belongs to a family of previously uncharacterized proteins found in many proteobacteria and some cyanobacteria. This suggests that membrane-bound, heme-containing ferric reductase proteins are not confined to eukaryotes but may be common in bacteria.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
25 articles.
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