Virginia Cointry, Reyes Ródenas, Nelly Morellet, Steven Fanara, Valérie Cotelle, Julie Neveu, Grégory Vert
{"title":"拟南芥金属受体IRT1紊乱环的金属传感特性。","authors":"Virginia Cointry, Reyes Ródenas, Nelly Morellet, Steven Fanara, Valérie Cotelle, Julie Neveu, Grégory Vert","doi":"10.1042/BCJ20240685","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The plant iron-regulated transporter 1 (IRT1) iron transporter is a plasma membrane protein that takes up iron in the root under iron-limited conditions. Besides its primary metal substrate iron, IRT1 transports other divalent metals that overaccumulate in plants when soil iron is low and IRT1 is highly expressed. We previously reported that the intracellular regulatory loop between transmembrane helices TM4 and TM5 is involved in the post-translational regulation of IRT1 by its non-iron metal substrates. Upon excess of zinc, IRT1 undergoes phosphorylation by CIPK23 followed by its ubiquitination by IDF1 to target IRT1 for vacuolar degradation. This zinc-dependent down-regulation of IRT1 requires the presence of four histidine (H) residues in the IRT1 loop, which directly bind zinc. However, how selective metal binding is achieved and how this allows downstream regulation to take place is largely not known. Here, we characterized the metal-binding properties and structure of the IRT1 loop to better understand the molecular basis of non-iron metal sensing and signaling. Using a combination of circular dichroism and NMR, we reveal that zinc and manganese bind to the IRT1 loop with nanomolar range affinity and that metal binding does not trigger structuration of the loop. We validate that zinc and manganese binding is mediated by four H residues and identify aspartic acid (D) residue D173 as helping in metal co-ordination and participating to metal sensing and metal-dependent degradation of IRT1 in plants. Altogether, our data provide further understanding of how IRT1 regulatory loop senses high cytosolic divalent metal concentrations to regulate metal uptake in plants.</p>","PeriodicalId":8825,"journal":{"name":"Biochemical Journal","volume":"482 9","pages":"451-466"},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12203963/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Metal-sensing properties of the disordered loop from the Arabidopsis metal transceptor IRT1.\",\"authors\":\"Virginia Cointry, Reyes Ródenas, Nelly Morellet, Steven Fanara, Valérie Cotelle, Julie Neveu, Grégory Vert\",\"doi\":\"10.1042/BCJ20240685\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The plant iron-regulated transporter 1 (IRT1) iron transporter is a plasma membrane protein that takes up iron in the root under iron-limited conditions. Besides its primary metal substrate iron, IRT1 transports other divalent metals that overaccumulate in plants when soil iron is low and IRT1 is highly expressed. We previously reported that the intracellular regulatory loop between transmembrane helices TM4 and TM5 is involved in the post-translational regulation of IRT1 by its non-iron metal substrates. Upon excess of zinc, IRT1 undergoes phosphorylation by CIPK23 followed by its ubiquitination by IDF1 to target IRT1 for vacuolar degradation. This zinc-dependent down-regulation of IRT1 requires the presence of four histidine (H) residues in the IRT1 loop, which directly bind zinc. However, how selective metal binding is achieved and how this allows downstream regulation to take place is largely not known. Here, we characterized the metal-binding properties and structure of the IRT1 loop to better understand the molecular basis of non-iron metal sensing and signaling. Using a combination of circular dichroism and NMR, we reveal that zinc and manganese bind to the IRT1 loop with nanomolar range affinity and that metal binding does not trigger structuration of the loop. We validate that zinc and manganese binding is mediated by four H residues and identify aspartic acid (D) residue D173 as helping in metal co-ordination and participating to metal sensing and metal-dependent degradation of IRT1 in plants. 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Metal-sensing properties of the disordered loop from the Arabidopsis metal transceptor IRT1.
The plant iron-regulated transporter 1 (IRT1) iron transporter is a plasma membrane protein that takes up iron in the root under iron-limited conditions. Besides its primary metal substrate iron, IRT1 transports other divalent metals that overaccumulate in plants when soil iron is low and IRT1 is highly expressed. We previously reported that the intracellular regulatory loop between transmembrane helices TM4 and TM5 is involved in the post-translational regulation of IRT1 by its non-iron metal substrates. Upon excess of zinc, IRT1 undergoes phosphorylation by CIPK23 followed by its ubiquitination by IDF1 to target IRT1 for vacuolar degradation. This zinc-dependent down-regulation of IRT1 requires the presence of four histidine (H) residues in the IRT1 loop, which directly bind zinc. However, how selective metal binding is achieved and how this allows downstream regulation to take place is largely not known. Here, we characterized the metal-binding properties and structure of the IRT1 loop to better understand the molecular basis of non-iron metal sensing and signaling. Using a combination of circular dichroism and NMR, we reveal that zinc and manganese bind to the IRT1 loop with nanomolar range affinity and that metal binding does not trigger structuration of the loop. We validate that zinc and manganese binding is mediated by four H residues and identify aspartic acid (D) residue D173 as helping in metal co-ordination and participating to metal sensing and metal-dependent degradation of IRT1 in plants. Altogether, our data provide further understanding of how IRT1 regulatory loop senses high cytosolic divalent metal concentrations to regulate metal uptake in plants.
期刊介绍:
Exploring the molecular mechanisms that underpin key biological processes, the Biochemical Journal is a leading bioscience journal publishing high-impact scientific research papers and reviews on the latest advances and new mechanistic concepts in the fields of biochemistry, cellular biosciences and molecular biology.
The Journal and its Editorial Board are committed to publishing work that provides a significant advance to current understanding or mechanistic insights; studies that go beyond observational work using in vitro and/or in vivo approaches are welcomed.
Painless publishing:
All papers undergo a rigorous peer review process; however, the Editorial Board is committed to ensuring that, if revisions are recommended, extra experiments not necessary to the paper will not be asked for.
Areas covered in the journal include:
Cell biology
Chemical biology
Energy processes
Gene expression and regulation
Mechanisms of disease
Metabolism
Molecular structure and function
Plant biology
Signalling