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Evidence that yeast frataxin is not an iron storage protein in vivo

Authors :
Seguin, Alexandra
Sutak, Robert
Bulteau, Anne-Laure
Garcia-Serres, Richard
Oddou, Jean-Louis
Lefevre, Sophie
Santos, Renata
Dancis, Andrew
Camadro, Jean-Michel
Latour, Jean-Marc
Lesuisse, Emmanuel
Source :
BBA: Molecular Basis of Disease. Jun2010, Vol. 1802 Issue 6, p531-538. 8p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract: Yeast cells deficient in the yeast frataxin homolog (Yfh1p) accumulate iron in their mitochondria. Whether this iron is toxic, however, remains unclear. We showed that large excesses of iron in the growth medium did not inhibit growth and did not decrease cell viability. Increasing the ratio of mitochondrial iron-to-Yfh1p by decreasing the steady-state level of Yfh1p to less than 100 molecules per cell had very few deleterious effects on cell physiology, even though the mitochondrial iron concentration greatly exceeded the iron-binding capacity of Yfh1p in these conditions. Mössbauer spectroscopy and FPLC analyses of whole mitochondria or of isolated mitochondrial matrices showed that the chemical and biochemical forms of the accumulated iron in mitochondria of mutant yeast strains (Δyfh1, Δggc1 and Δssq1) displayed a nearly identical distribution. This was also the case for Δggc1 cells, in which Yfh1p was overproduced. In these mitochondria, most of the iron was insoluble, and the ratio of soluble-to-insoluble iron did not change when the amount of Yfh1p was increased up to 4500molecules per cell. Our results do not privilege the hypothesis of Yfh1p being an iron storage protein in vivo. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09254439
Volume :
1802
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BBA: Molecular Basis of Disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
49849741
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbadis.2010.03.008