Lipoylation is dependent on the ferredoxin FDX1 and dispensable under hypoxia in human cells.
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Abstract | Iron sulfur clusters (ISC) are essential cofactors that participate in electron transfer, environmental sensing, and catalysis. Amongst the most ancient ISC containing proteins are the ferredoxin family of electron carriers. Humans have two ferredoxins, FDX1 and FDX2, both of which are localized to mitochondria, and the latter of which is itself important for ISC synthesis. We have previously shown that hypoxia can eliminate the requirement for some components of the ISC biosynthetic pathway, but ferredoxins were not included in that study. Here we report that FDX1, but not FDX2, is dispensable under 1% O in cultured human cells. We find that FDX1 is essential for production of the lipoic acid cofactor, which is synthesized by the ISC containing enzyme lipoyl synthase (LIAS). While hypoxia can rescue the growth phenotype of either FDX1 or LIAS knockout cells, lipoylation in these same cells is not rescued, arguing against an alternative biosynthetic route or salvage pathway for lipoate in hypoxia. Our work reveals the divergent roles of FDX1 and FDX2 in mitochondria, identifies a role for FDX1 in lipoate synthesis, and suggests that loss of lipoic acid can be tolerated under low oxygen tensions in cell culture. |
Year of Publication | 2023
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Journal | The Journal of biological chemistry
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Pages | 105075
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Date Published | 07/2023
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ISSN | 1083-351X
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DOI | 10.1016/j.jbc.2023.105075
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PubMed ID | 37481209
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