Department of Biochemistry
School of Medicine & Biomedical Sciences
Faculty


Dr. Daniel Kosman

 

DANIEL J. KOSMAN, Ph.D.
UB Distinguished Professor

 

 


Cellular Trafficking of Iron in Eukaryotes Small and Large

The transition metal iron is difficult to absorb, hard to get rid of, and toxic, and after all of that, it's an essential nutrient, particularly for aerobic organisms which pretty much includes all eukaryotes from fungi to plants to metazoans, that is, us.  Consequently, cells and organisms have developed efficient means to scavenge Fe from the environment and to "handle" it so as to suppress the chemical reactivity that makes iron both toxic and essential to the function of most of the cell's reactions that take advantage of the cell's oxygen-containing environment.  My lab investigates this iron trafficking in "simple" model organisms like the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; in mammalian cells in culture; and in whole animals.  We investigate the structure and function of proteins involved in this iron handling by kinetic and spectral techniques in vitro and we assess these structure-activity relationships in vivo in the same systems.  A primary focus is on a protein type that is essential the trafficking of Fe into the cells of lower eukaryotes, like fungi and alga, and out of cells of higher eukaryotes, like mice and humans.  This protein is a ferroxidase enzyme, a member of a class of proteins known as multicopper oxidases, or MCOs.  These copper enzymes support normal iron metabolism in all eukaryotes and their dependence on copper atom prosthetic groups for their enzyme activity makes all of iron metabolism copper-dependent.  These ferroxidases not only assist in the accumulation and normal metabolism of iron, they also protect the cell and organism from iron toxicity.  A simple example is found in S. cerevisiae:a yeast cell that doesn't make this enzyme is not only deficient in Fe, Fe is also toxic to it: a double whammy for this ferroxidase-deficient organism. The yeast ferroxidase is known as Fet3p, the protein product of the FET3 gene.  Humans who lack their ferroxidase enzyme, ceruloplasmin (hCp), also become systemically iron-deficient, and, just like yeast, exhibit neuropathologies that follow from the damage that the iron in the brain causes to the neurons there because it is not being "handled" by the hCp that is absent.  One of the goals of our work is to produce a protein replacement for this "missing" Cp, a therapeutic that can be used to suppress the iron imbalance and neuropathology in people whose Cp isn't up to doing the job.

Kosman Figure 3

Selected Recent Publications:

Kosman, D. J. 2010. Multicopper oxidase: a workshop on copper coordination chemistry, electron transfer, and metallophysiology. J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 15:15-28

Kosman, D. J. 2009. Illustrating the steady-state condition and the single molecule kinetic method with the NMDA receptor. Biochem. Mol. Biol. Educ. 37:333-338.

Terzulli, A., Kosman, D. J. 2009. The Fox1 ferroxidase of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: a new multicopper oxidase structural paradigm. J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 14:315-325.

Sedlák, E., Ziegler, L., Kosman, D. J., Wittung-Stafshede, P. 2008. In vitro unfolding of yeast multicopper oxidase Fet3p variants reveals unique role of each metal site. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 105:19258-19263

Jung, W. J., Sham, A., Singh, A., Kosman, D.J. and Kronstad, J.W. (2008) Iron source preference and regulation of iron uptake in Cryptococcus neoformans. Plos Path. 4, e45. [PDF]

Kosman, D.J. (2008) Substrate entasis and electronic coupling elements in electron transfer from FeII in a multicopper oxidase. Inorgan. Chim. Acta 361:844-849. [PDF]

Singh, A. Kaur, N. and Kosman, D. J. (2007) The metalloreductase Fre6p in Fe-efflux from the yeast vacuole. J. Biol. Chem. 282:28619- 8626. [PDF]

Augustine, T. J., Stoj, C. S., Taylor, A. B., Hart, P. J., Kosman, D. J., and Solomon, E. I. (2007) Shall We Dance? How a multicopper oxidase chooses its electron transfer partner. Acc. Chem. Res. 40:445-452. [PDF]

Stoj, C. S., Augustine, T. J., L., Solomon, E. I., and Kosman, D. J. (2007) Structure-function analysis of the cuprous oxidase activity in Fet3p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J. Biol. Chem. 282:7862-7868. [PDF]

Stoj, C. S., Augustine, T. J., Zeigler, L., Solomon, E. I., and Kosman, D. J. (2006) The structural basis of the ferrous iron specificity of the yeast ferroxidase, Fet3p. Biochemistry 45:12741-12749. [PDF]

Kwok, E.Y., Severance, S. and Kosman, D.J. (2006) Evidence for iron channeling in the Fet3p, Ftr1p high affinity iron uptake complex in the yeast plasma membrane. Biochemistry, 45:6317-6327. [PDF]

Singh, A., Severance, S., Kaur, N., Wiltsie, W. and Kosman, D. J. (2006) Assembly, activation and trafficking of the Fet3p, Ftr1p high affinity iron permease complex in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J. Biol. Chem., 281: 13355-13364 [PDF]

Kowk, E. Y., Stoj, C. S., Severance, S., and Kosman, D. J. (2006) An engineered bifunctional high affinity iron uptake protein in the yeast plasma membrane. J. Inorg. Biochem. 100:1053-1060 [PDF]

Taylor, A. B., Stoj, C. S., Ziegler, L., D. J. Kosman and P. J. Hart, (2005) The copper-iron connection in biology: the structure of the yeast metallo-oxidase, Fet3p. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 102:15459-15464 [PDF]

Kwok, E., and Kosman, D. J. (2005) Iron in yeast: mechanisms involved in homeostasis. Top. Curr. Genet. 14, published on-line. [PDF]

Stoj, C. S., and Kosman, D. J. (2005) Copper Oxidases, in Encyclopedia of Bioinorganic Chemistry, 2nd Ed., R. B. King, ed, John Wiley, in press. [PDF]

Quintanar, L., Gebhard, M., *Wang, T.-P., Kosman, D. J., and Solomon, E. I. 2004. Ferrous binding to the multicopper oxidases Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fet3p and human ceruloplasmin: contributions to ferroxidase activity. J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 126:6579-6589.
*Severance, S., *Chakraborty, S., and Kosman, D. J. 2004. The Ftr1p iron permease in the yeast plasma membrane: orientation, topology, and structure-function relationships. Biochem. J. 380:487–496.

Kosman, D. J. (2003) Molecular mechanisms of iron uptake in fungi. Mol. Microbiol. 47:1185-1197 (review article).
Stoj, C., and Kosman, D. J. (2003) Cuprous Oxidase Activity of Yeast Fet3p and Human Ceruloplasmin: Implication for Function. FEBS Lett., 554:422-426. [PDF]

 


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