Essential role of the HMG domain in the function of yeast mitochondrial histone HM: functional complementation of HM by the nuclear nonhistone protein NHP6A.

Abstract

The yeast mitochondrial histone protein HM is required for maintenance of the mitochondrial genome, and disruption of the gene encoding HM (H1M1/ABF2) results in formation of a respiration-deficient petite mutant phenotype. HM contains two homologous regions, which share sequence similarity with the eukaryotic nuclear nonhistone protein, HMG-1. Experiments with various deletion mutants of HM show that a single HMG domain of HM is functional and can restore respiration competency to cells that lack HM protein (him1 mutant cells). The gene encoding the putative yeast nuclear HMG-1 homolog, the NHP6A protein, can functionally complement the him1 mutation.The yeast mitochondrial histone protein HM is required for maintenance of the mitochondrial genome, and disruption of the gene encoding HM (H1M1/ABF2) results in formation of a respiration-deficient petite mutant phenotype. HM contains two homologous regions, which share sequence similarity with the eukaryotic nuclear nonhistone protein, HMG-1. Experiments with various deletion mutants of HM show that a single HMG domain of HM is functional and can restore respiration competency to cells that lack HM protein (him1 mutant cells). The gene encoding the putative yeast nuclear HMG-1 homolog, the NHP6A protein, can functionally complement the him1 mutation

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