Self-Assembly and Biphasic
Iron-Binding Characteristics
of Mms6, A Bacterial Protein That Promotes the Formation of Superparamagnetic
Magnetite Nanoparticles of Uniform Size and Shape
posted on 2012-01-09, 00:00authored byLijun Wang, Tanya Prozorov, Pierre E. Palo, Xunpei Liu, David Vaknin, Ruslan Prozorov, Surya Mallapragada, Marit Nilsen-Hamilton
Highly ordered mineralized structures created by living
organisms
are often hierarchical in structure with fundamental structural elements
at nanometer scales. Proteins have been found responsible for forming
many of these structures, but the mechanisms by which these biomineralization
proteins function are generally poorly understood. To better understand
its role in biomineralization, the magnetotactic bacterial protein,
Mms6, which promotes the formation in vitro of superparamagnetic magnetite
nanoparticles of uniform size and shape, was studied for its structure
and function. Mms6 is shown to have two phases of iron binding: one
high affinity and stoichiometric and the other low affinity, high
capacity, and cooperative with respect to iron. The protein is amphipathic
with a hydrophobic N-terminal domain and hydrophilic C-terminal domain.
It self-assembles to form a micelle, with most particles consisting
of 20–40 monomers, with the hydrophilic C-termini exposed on
the outside. Studies of proteins with mutated C-terminal domains show
that the C-terminal domain contributes to the stability of this multisubunit
particle and binds iron by a mechanism that is sensitive to the arrangement
of carboxyl/hydroxyl groups in this domain.