Molecular Details of the Frataxin–Scaffold Interaction during Mitochondrial Fe–S Cluster Assembly


Journal article


C. Campbell, Ashley E. Pall, A. Naik, Lindsey Thompson, Timothy L. Stemmler
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Campbell, C., Pall, A. E., Naik, A., Thompson, L., & Stemmler, T. L. (2021). Molecular Details of the Frataxin–Scaffold Interaction during Mitochondrial Fe–S Cluster Assembly. International Journal of Molecular Sciences.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Campbell, C., Ashley E. Pall, A. Naik, Lindsey Thompson, and Timothy L. Stemmler. “Molecular Details of the Frataxin–Scaffold Interaction during Mitochondrial Fe–S Cluster Assembly.” International Journal of Molecular Sciences (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Campbell, C., et al. “Molecular Details of the Frataxin–Scaffold Interaction during Mitochondrial Fe–S Cluster Assembly.” International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{c2021a,
  title = {Molecular Details of the Frataxin–Scaffold Interaction during Mitochondrial Fe–S Cluster Assembly},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences},
  author = {Campbell, C. and Pall, Ashley E. and Naik, A. and Thompson, Lindsey and Stemmler, Timothy L.}
}

Abstract

Iron–sulfur clusters are essential to almost every life form and utilized for their unique structural and redox-targeted activities within cells during many cellular pathways. Although there are three different Fe–S cluster assembly pathways in prokaryotes (the NIF, SUF and ISC pathways) and two in eukaryotes (CIA and ISC pathways), the iron–sulfur cluster (ISC) pathway serves as the central mechanism for providing 2Fe–2S clusters, directly and indirectly, throughout the entire cell in eukaryotes. Proteins central to the eukaryotic ISC cluster assembly complex include the cysteine desulfurase, a cysteine desulfurase accessory protein, the acyl carrier protein, the scaffold protein and frataxin (in humans, NFS1, ISD11, ACP, ISCU and FXN, respectively). Recent molecular details of this complex (labeled NIAUF from the first letter from each ISC protein outlined earlier), which exists as a dimeric pentamer, have provided real structural insight into how these partner proteins arrange themselves around the cysteine desulfurase, the core dimer of the (NIAUF)2 complex. In this review, we focus on both frataxin and the scaffold within the human, fly and yeast model systems to provide a better understanding of the biophysical characteristics of each protein alone and within the FXN/ISCU complex as it exists within the larger NIAUF construct. These details support a complex dynamic interaction between the FXN and ISCU proteins when both are part of the NIAUF complex and this provides additional insight into the coordinated mechanism of Fe–S cluster assembly.




Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in