Published March 21, 2018
| Version v1
Publication
Zim17/Tim15 links mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster biosynthesis to nuclear genome stability
Description
Genomic instability is related to a wide-range of human diseases. Here, we show that mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster biosynthesis is important for the maintenance of nuclear genome stability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cells lacking the mitochondrial chaperone Zim17 (Tim15/Hep1), a component of the iron–sulfur biosynthesis machinery, have limited respiration activity, mimic the metabolic response to iron starvation and suffer a dramatic increase in nuclear genome recombination. Increased oxidative damage or deficient DNA repair do not account for the observed genomic hyperrecombination. Impaired cell-cycle progression and genetic interactions of ZIM17 with components of the RFC-like complex involved in mitotic checkpoints indicate that replicative stress causes hyperrecombination in zim17Δ mutants. Furthermore, nuclear accumulation of pre-ribosomal particles in zim17Δ mutants reinforces the importance of iron–sulfur clusters in normal ribosome biosynthesis. We propose that compromised ribosome biosynthesis and cell-cycle progression are interconnected, together contributing to replicative stress and nuclear genome instability in zim17Δ mutants.
Abstract
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación BIO2003-07172, BIO2006-08051, CSD2007-0015Abstract
Junta de Andalucía P08-CTS-04297Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/71202
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/71202
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE