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Cell Growth and Development

The Glycine-Phenylalanine-Rich Region Determines the Specificity of the Yeast Hsp40 Sis1

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Pages 7751-7758 | Received 14 Jun 1999, Accepted 10 Aug 1999, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Hsp40s are ubiquitous, conserved proteins which function with molecular chaperones of the Hsp70 class. Sis1 is an essential Hsp40 of the cytosol of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, thought to be required for initiation of translation. We carried out a genetic analysis to determine the regions of Sis1 required to perform its key function(s). A C-terminal truncation of Sis1, removing 231 amino acids but retaining the N-terminal 121 amino acids encompassing the J domain and the glycine-phenylalanine-rich (G-F) region, was able to rescue the inviability of a Δsis1 strain. The yeast cytosol contains other Hsp40s, including Ydj1. To determine which regions carried the critical determinants of Sis1 function, we constructed chimeric genes containing portions of SIS1 and YDJ1. A chimera containing the J domain of Sis1 and the G-F region of Ydj1 could not rescue the lethality of the Δsis1 strain. However, a chimera with the J domain of Ydj1 and the G/F region of Sis1 could rescue the strain’s lethality, indicating that the G-F region is a unique region required for the essential function of Sis1. However, a J domain is also required, as mutants expected to cause a disruption of the interaction of the J domain with Hsp70 are inviable. We conclude that the G-F region, previously thought only to be a linker or spacer region between the J domain and C-terminal regions of Hsp40s, is a critical determinant of Sis1 function.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank J. Johnson, C. Pfund, and N. Lopez for critical reading of the manuscript, Tara Beck for providing antibodies to Sis1 and Ydj1 and purified Sis1 and Ydj1 proteins, A. Caplan for providing ydj1 mutant C406S, J. Johnson for providing the Ydj1 truncation, and K. Arndt for providing a wild-type SIS1plasmid.

This work was supported by NIH grant 5RO1 GM31107 to E.A.C.

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