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Published December 2015 | public
Journal Article

The unique self-assembly/disassembly property of Archaeoglobus fulgidus ferritin and its implications on molecular release from the protein cage

Abstract

Background: In conventional in vitro encapsulation of molecular cargo, the multi-subunit ferritin protein cages are disassembled in extremely acidic pH and re-assembled in the presence of highly concentrated cargo materials, which results in poor yields due to the low-pH treatment. In contrast, Archaeoglobus fulgidus open-pore ferritin (AfFtn) and its closed-pore mutant (AfFtn-AA) are present as dimeric species in neutral buffers that self-assemble into cage-like structure upon addition of metal ions. Methods: To understand the iron-mediated self-assembly and ascorbate-mediated disassembly properties, we studied the iron binding and release profile of the AfFtn and AfFtn-AA, and the corresponding oligomerization of their subunits. Results: Fe^(2+) binding and conversion to Fe^(3+) triggered the self-assembly of cage-like structures from dimeric species of AfFtn and AfFtn-AA subunits, while disassembly was induced by dissolving the iron core with reducing agents. The closed-pore AfFtn-AA has identical iron binding kinetics but lower iron release rates when compared to AfFtn. While the iron binding rate is proportional to Fe^(2+) concentration, the iron release rate can be controlled by varying ascorbate concentrations. Conclusion: The AfFtn and AfFtn-AA cages formed by iron mineralization could be disassembled by dissolving the iron core. The open-pores of AfFtn contribute to enhanced reductive iron release while the small channels located at the 3-fold symmetry axis (3-fold channels) are used for iron uptake.

Additional Information

© 2015 Elsevier B.V. Received date: 8 April 2015; Revised date: 13 August 2015; Accepted date: 31 August 2015; Available online 2 September 2015. This work was funded by Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier I (RG33/07).

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023