The Functional Interaction of Mitochondrial Hsp70s with the Escort Protein Zim17 Is Critical for Fe/S Biogenesis and Substrate Interaction at the Inner Membrane Preprotein Translocase*

Background: Zim17 represents a Hsp70-interacting protein residing in the mitochondrial matrix compartment. Results: Conditional zim17 mutants show functional defects in essential mtHsp70 activities, biosynthesis of Fe/S clusters, and interaction with newly imported substrate proteins. Conclusion: Zim17 exerts a direct regulative function on Hsp70 independent of its aggregation-protective role. Significance: Identification of novel co-chaperone mechanism unravels complex functional regulation of Hsp70 chaperones. The yeast protein Zim17 belongs to a unique class of co-chaperones that maintain the solubility of Hsp70 proteins in mitochondria and plastids of eukaryotic cells. However, little is known about the functional cooperation between Zim17 and mitochondrial Hsp70 proteins in vivo. To analyze the effects of a loss of Zim17 function in the authentic environment, we introduced novel conditional mutations within the ZIM17 gene of the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae that allowed a recovery of temperature-sensitive but respiratory competent zim17 mutant cells. On fermentable growth medium, the mutant cells were prone to acquire respiratory deficits and showed a strong aggregation of the mitochondrial Hsp70 Ssq1 together with a concomitant defect in Fe/S protein biogenesis. In contrast, under respiring conditions, the mitochondrial Hsp70s Ssc1 and Ssq1 exhibited only a partial aggregation. We show that the induction of the zim17 mutant phenotype leads to strong import defects for Ssc1-dependent matrix-targeted precursor proteins that correlate with a significantly reduced binding of newly imported substrate proteins to Ssc1. We conclude that Zim17 is not only required for the maintenance of mtHsp70 solubility but also directly assists the functional interaction of mtHsp70 with substrate proteins in a J-type co-chaperone-dependent manner.

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