학술논문

Definition of the residues required for the interaction between glycine-extended gastrin and transferrin in vitro.
Document Type
Article
Source
FEBS Journal. Sep2009, Vol. 276 Issue 17, p4866-4874. 9p. 1 Chart, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*GASTRIN
*TRANSFERRIN
*IRON in the body
*BLOOD circulation
*BLOOD proteins
Language
ISSN
1742-464X
Abstract
Transferrin is the main iron transport protein found in the circulation, and the level of transferrin saturation in the blood is an important indicator of iron status. The peptides amidated gastrin(17) (Gamide) and glycine-extended gastrin(17) (Ggly) are well known for their roles in controlling acid secretion and as growth factors in the gastrointestinal tract. Several lines of evidence, including the facts that transferrin binds gastrin, that gastrins bind ferric ions, and that the level of expression of gastrins positively correlates with transferrin saturation, suggest the possible involvement of the transferrin–gastrin interaction in iron homeostasis. In the present work, the interaction between gastrins and transferrin has been characterized by surface plasmon resonance and covalent crosslinking. First, an interaction between iron-free apo-transferrin and Gamide or Ggly was observed. The fact that no interaction was observed in the presence of the chelator EDTA suggested that the gastrin–ferric ion complex was the interacting species. Moreover, removal of ferric ions with EDTA reduced the stability of the complex between apo-transferrin and gastrins, and no interaction was observed between Gamide or Ggly and diferric transferrin. Second, some or all of glutamates at positions 8–10 of the Ggly molecule, together with the C-terminal domain, were necessary for the interaction with apo-transferrin. Third, monoferric transferrin mutants incapable of binding iron in either the N-terminal or C-terminal lobe still bound Ggly. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that gastrin peptides bind to nonligand residues within the open cleft in each lobe of transferrin and are involved in iron loading of transferrin in vivo. Structured digital abstract • , : Apo-transferrin (uniprotkb: ) and Gamide (uniprotkb: ) bind ( ) by surface plasmon resonance ( ) • , : Ggly (uniprotkb: ) and Apo-transferrin (uniprotkb: ) bind ( ) by cross-linking studies ( ) • : Apo-transferrin (uniprotkb: ) and Ggly (uniprotkb: ) bind ( ) by competition binding ( ) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]