Chemistry Seminar with Dr. Jennifer DuBois from Montana State University
Abstract: Iron is the quintessential biocatalytic metal, unleashing the growth-promoting power of O2. Yet, O2 is largely unavailable in many metabolically robust environments, including the anoxic interiors of wounds, tumors, and compost heaps, and the lumen of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. We asked: how do the anaerobic species that thrive in these environments use metals to carry out reactions that canonically depend on Fe and O2? We recently described a long-sought, O2-independent mechanism by which dietary heme – at once a highly bioavailable iron source and cancer-promoting compound – is catabolized by widespread anaerobic species from GI tract consortia. At the heart of this mechanism is HmuS, a >1400 amino acid, monomeric de-chelatase that deconstructs heme to produce protoporphyrin IX and Fe(II). This enzyme is pervasive in the GI tracts of healthy humans, where the hmu pathway may serve as a primary entry point for heme-iron into the host-microbiome ecosystem. We propose a structure-based mechanism for this unusual reaction and describe the pathway’s possible implications for health.