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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 255, Issue 23, 11204-11209, 12, 1980
BC Antanaitis, P Aisen, HR Lilienthal, RM Roberts and FW Bazer
Low temperature (T less than or equal to 20 K) EPR measurements have
revealed the presence of a heretofore undetected signal in uteroferrin, a
purple protein bearing a single iron atom per molecule. All three of its
principal g values (1.923, 1.738, and 1.583) lie well below the free
electron value of 2.0023. Magnetic susceptibility data from 2-77 K confirm
that the novel EPR spectrum arises from a paramagnetic center with a single
unpaired electron spin. Quantitative correlation of the EPR,
susceptibility, and optical data point to chromophoric iron as the source
of the rhombic EPR spectrum. Furthermore, close agreement between the
concentration of iron and the integrated intensity of the rhombic EPR
signal show that the iron in the paramagnetic center is mononuclear.
Reduction of the protein to its pink form leaves the rhombic signal
essentially unaltered. The previously reported g' = 4.3 EPR signal accounts
for only a small fraction of the total iron in the protein and undoubtedly
arises from adventitious iron. Collectively, these results strongly suggest
that uteroferrin represents a new class of low spin iron proteins.
The novel "g' = 1.74" EPR spectrum of pink and purple uteroferrin
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