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Volume 271, Number 22,
Issue of May 31, 1996
pp. 12790-12794
©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Cooperative Interactions between the Amino- and
Carboxyl-terminal Lobes Contribute to the Unique Iron-binding
Stability of Lactoferrin
(Received for publication, February 1, 1996, and in revised form, March 19, 1996)
Pauline P.
Ward
,
X.
Zhou
and
O. M.
Conneely
From the Department of Cell Biology, Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, Texas 77030
Lactoferrin is a member of the transferrin family
of iron-binding proteins. Several functions have been ascribed to
lactoferrin, including regulation of iron homeostasis, antibacterial
properties, and regulation of myelopoiesis. However, the structural
features of lactoferrin that are required for most of these functions
are unknown.
Previously, we reported the development of an efficient fungal
expression system to produce recombinant human lactoferrin. The
availability of this production system demonstrated the feasibility of
producing mutant lactoferrins to address the structure/function
relationship of the protein. In the present study, we used a
site-directed mutagenesis approach to address the contribution of the
bilobal structure of lactoferrin to its unique iron-binding stability.
Like transferrin, lactoferrin consists of two repeated iron-binding
lobes that bind one iron atom each. However, unlike transferrin,
lactoferrin retains iron over a broad pH range, a key property that
contributes to the unique iron-binding functions of the protein. Using
mutants that selectively ablate the iron-binding function in either
lobe, we demonstrate differential iron-binding stability of the amino-
and carboxyl-terminal iron-binding lobes of lactoferrin. Further, we
show that the unique iron-binding stability of the protein is imparted
primarily by the carboxyl-terminal domain which functions cooperatively
to stabilize iron-binding to the amino-terminal domain of
lactoferrin.

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Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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