Cluster-selective 57 Fe labeling of a Twitch-domain-containing radical SAM enzyme

Fe-specific techniques such as Mössbauer spectroscopy are invaluable tools in mechanistic studies of Fe-S proteins. However, they remain underutilized for proteins that bind multiple Fe-S clusters because such proteins are typically uniformly enriched with Fe. As a result, it can be unclear which sp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChemical science (Cambridge) Vol. 14; no. 27; pp. 7492 - 7499
Main Authors Namkoong, Gil, Suess, Daniel L M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 12.07.2023
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Summary:Fe-specific techniques such as Mössbauer spectroscopy are invaluable tools in mechanistic studies of Fe-S proteins. However, they remain underutilized for proteins that bind multiple Fe-S clusters because such proteins are typically uniformly enriched with Fe. As a result, it can be unclear which spectroscopic responses derive from which cluster, and this in turn obscures the chemistry that takes place at each cluster. Herein, we report a facile method for cluster-selective Fe enrichment based on exchange between the protein's Fe-S clusters and exogenous Fe ions. Through a combination of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometric and Fe Mössbauer spectroscopic analysis, we show that, of the two [Fe S ] clusters in BtrN (a Twitch-domain-containing radical -adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) enzyme), the Fe ions in the SAM-binding cluster undergo faster exchange with exogenous Fe ; the auxiliary cluster is essentially inert under the reaction conditions. Exploiting this rate difference allows for either of the two [Fe S ] clusters to be selectively labeled: the SAM-binding cluster can be labeled by exchanging unlabeled BtrN with Fe , or the auxiliary cluster can be labeled by exchanging fully labeled BtrN with natural abundance Fe . The labeling selectivity likely originates primarily from differences in the clusters' accessibility to small molecules, with secondary contributions from the different redox properties of the clusters. This method for cluster-selective isotopic labeling could in principle be applied to any protein that binds multiple Fe-S clusters so long as the clusters undergo exchange with exogenous Fe ions at sufficiently different rates.
ISSN:2041-6520
2041-6539
DOI:10.1039/D3SC02016A