38 research outputs found

    Iron-induced oligomerization of yeast frataxin homologue Yfh1 is dispensable in vivo

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    The neurodegenerative disease Friedreich's ataxia is caused by reduced levels of frataxin, a mitochondrial matrix protein. The in vivo role of frataxin is under debate. Frataxin, as well as its yeast homologue Yfh1, binds multiple iron atoms as an oligomer and has been proposed to function as a crucial iron-storage protein. We identified a mutant Yfh1 defective in iron-induced oligomerization. This mutant protein was able to replace functionally wild-type Yfh1, even when expressed at low levels, when mitochondrial iron levels were high and in mutant strains having deletions of genes that had synthetic growth defects with a YFH1 deletion. The ability of an oligomerization-deficient Yfh1 to function in vivo suggests that oligomerization, and thus oligomerization-induced iron storage, is not a critical function of Yfh1. Rather, the capacity of this oligomerization-deficient mutant to interact with the Isu protein suggests a more direct role of Yfh1 in iron–sulphur cluster biogenesis

    Nucleoid localization of Hsp40 Mdj1 is important for its function in maintenance of mitochondrial DNA

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    Faithful replication and propagation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is critical for cellular respiration. Molecular chaperones, ubiquitous proteins involved in protein folding and remodeling of protein complexes, have been implicated in mtDNA transactions. In particular, cells lacking Mdj1, an Hsp40 co-chaperone of Hsp70 in the mitochondrial matrix, do not maintain functional mtDNA. Here we report that the great majority of Mdj1 is associated with nucleoids, DNA-protein complexes that are the functional unit of mtDNA transactions. Underscoring the importance of Hsp70 chaperone activity in the maintenance of mtDNA, an Mdj1 variant having an alteration in the Hsp70-interacting J-domain does not maintain mtDNA. However, a J-domain containing fragment expressed at the level that Mdj1 is normally present is not competent to maintain mtDNA, suggesting a function of Mdj1 beyond that carried out by its J-domain. Nevertheless, loss of mtDNA function upon Mdj1 depletion is retarded when the J-domain, is overexpressed. Analysis of Mdj1 variants revealed a correlation between nucleoid association and DNA maintenance activity, suggesting that localization is functionally important. We found that Mdj1 has DNA binding activity and that variants retaining DNA-binding activity also retained nucleoid association. Together, our results are consistent with a model in which Mdj1, tethered to the nucleoid via DNA binding, thus driving a high local concentration of the Hsp70 machinery, is important for faithful DNA maintenance and propagation
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