scholarly journals Metabolic RNA labeling for probing RNA dynamics in bacteria

2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (22) ◽  
pp. 12566-12576
Author(s):  
Liying Meng ◽  
Yilan Guo ◽  
Qi Tang ◽  
Rongbing Huang ◽  
Yuchen Xie ◽  
...  

Abstract Metabolic labeling of RNAs with noncanonical nucleosides that are chemically active, followed by chemoselective conjugation with imaging probes or enrichment tags, has emerged as a powerful method for studying RNA transcription and degradation in eukaryotes. However, metabolic RNA labeling is not applicable for prokaryotes, in which the complexity and distinctness of gene regulation largely remain to be explored. Here, we report 2′-deoxy-2′-azidoguanosine (AzG) as a noncanonical nucleoside compatible with metabolic labeling of bacterial RNAs. With AzG, we develop AIR-seq (azidonucleoside-incorporated RNA sequencing), which enables genome-wide analysis of transcription upon heat stress in Escherichia coli. Furthermore, AIR-seq coupled with pulse-chase labeling allows for global analysis of bacterial RNA degradation. Finally, we demonstrate that RNAs of mouse gut microbiotas can be metabolically labeled with AzG in living animals. The AzG-enabled metabolic RNA labeling should find broad applications in studying RNA biology in various bacterial species.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiho Makino ◽  
Tomoko Kawamata ◽  
Shintaro Iwasaki ◽  
Yoshinori Ohsumi

AbstractSynthesis and degradation of cellular constituents must be balanced to maintain cellular homeostasis, especially during adaptation to environmental stress. The role of autophagy in the degradation of proteins and organelles is well-characterized. However, autophagy-mediated RNA degradation in response to stress and the potential preference of specific RNAs to undergo autophagy-mediated degradation have not been examined. In this study, we demonstrate selective mRNA degradation by rapamycin-induced autophagy in yeast. Profiling of mRNAs from the vacuole reveals that subsets of mRNAs, such as those encoding amino acid biosynthesis and ribosomal proteins, are preferentially delivered to the vacuole by autophagy for degradation. We also reveal that autophagy-mediated mRNA degradation is tightly coupled with translation by ribosomes. Genome-wide ribosome profiling suggested a high correspondence between ribosome association and targeting to the vacuole. We propose that autophagy-mediated mRNA degradation is a unique and previously-unappreciated function of autophagy that affords post-transcriptional gene regulation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 62 ◽  
pp. 119-129
Author(s):  
Jared T. Baisden ◽  
Jessica L. Childs-Disney ◽  
Lucas S. Ryan ◽  
Matthew D. Disney

2020 ◽  
Vol 402 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-72
Author(s):  
Daniel Ryan ◽  
Gianluca Prezza ◽  
Alexander J. Westermann

AbstractBacteria employ noncoding RNAs to maintain cellular physiology, adapt global gene expression to fluctuating environments, sense nutrients, coordinate their interaction with companion microbes and host cells, and protect themselves against bacteriophages. While bacterial RNA research has made fundamental contributions to biomedicine and biotechnology, the bulk of our knowledge of RNA biology stems from the study of a handful of aerobic model species. In comparison, RNA research is lagging in many medically relevant obligate anaerobic species, in particular the numerous commensal bacteria comprising our gut microbiota. This review presents a guide to RNA-based regulatory mechanisms in the phylum Bacteroidetes, focusing on the most abundant bacterial genus in the human gut, Bacteroides spp. This includes recent case reports on riboswitches, an mRNA leader, cis- and trans-encoded small RNAs (sRNAs) in Bacteroides spp., and a survey of CRISPR-Cas systems across Bacteroidetes. Recent work from our laboratory now suggests the existence of hundreds of noncoding RNA candidates in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, the emerging model organism for functional microbiota research. Based on these collective observations, we predict mechanistic and functional commonalities and differences between Bacteroides sRNAs and those of other model bacteria, and outline open questions and tools needed to boost Bacteroidetes RNA research.


Antibiotics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 438
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Suigo ◽  
Michaelle Chojnacki ◽  
Carlo Zanotto ◽  
Victor Sebastián-Pérez ◽  
Carlo De Giuli Morghen ◽  
...  

Antibiotic resistance is spreading worldwide and it has become one of the most important issues in modern medicine. In this context, the bacterial RNA degradation and processing machinery are essential processes for bacterial viability that may be exploited for antimicrobial therapy. In Staphylococcus aureus, RnpA has been hypothesized to be one of the main players in these mechanisms. S. aureus RnpA is able to modulate mRNA degradation and complex with a ribozyme (rnpB), facilitating ptRNA maturation. Corresponding small molecule screening campaigns have recently identified a few classes of RnpA inhibitors, and their structure activity relationship (SAR) has only been partially explored. Accordingly, in the present work, using computational modeling of S. aureus RnpA we identified putative crucial interactions of known RnpA inhibitors, and we used this information to design, synthesize, and biologically assess new potential RnpA inhibitors. The present results may be beneficial for the overall knowledge about RnpA inhibitors belonging to both RNPA2000-like thiosemicarbazides and JC-like piperidine carboxamides molecular classes. We evaluated the importance of the different key moieties, such as the dichlorophenyl and the piperidine of JC2, and the semithiocarbazide, the furan, and the i-propylphenyl ring of RNPA2000. Our efforts could provide a foundation for further computational-guided investigations.


Author(s):  
Lisha Ha ◽  
Jennifer Colquhoun ◽  
Nicholas Noinaj ◽  
Chittaranjan Das ◽  
Paul M. Dunman ◽  
...  

Staphylococcus aureus ribonuclease-P-protein subunit (RnpA) is a promising antimicrobial target that is a key protein component for two essential cellular processes, RNA degradation and transfer-RNA (tRNA) maturation. The first crystal structure of RnpA from the pathogenic bacterial species, S. aureus, is reported at 2.0 Å resolution. The structure presented maintains key similarities with previously reported RnpA structures from bacteria and archaea, including the highly conserved RNR-box region and aromatic residues in the precursor-tRNA 5′-leader-binding domain. This structure will be instrumental in the pursuit of structure-based designed inhibitors targeting RnpA-mediated RNA processing as a novel therapeutic approach for treating S. aureus infections.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Behrooz Darbani ◽  
Douglas B. Kell ◽  
Irina Borodina

ABSTRACTTransporter proteins mediate the translocation of substances across the membranes of living cells. We performed a genome-wide analysis of the compositional reshaping of cellular transporters (the transportome) across the kingdoms of bacteria, archaea, and eukarya. We show that the transportomes of eukaryotes evolved strongly towards a higher energetic efficiency, as ATP-dependent transporters diminished and secondary transporters and ion channels proliferated. This change has likely been important in the development of tissues performing energetically costly cellular functions. The transportome analysis also indicated seven bacterial species, includingNeorickettsia risticiiandNeorickettsia sennetsu, as likely origins of the mitochondrion in eukaryotes, due to the restricted presence therein of clear homologues of modern mitochondrial solute carriers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Vialetto ◽  
Yanying Yu ◽  
Scott P. Collins ◽  
Katharina G. Wandera ◽  
Lars Barquist ◽  
...  

Immune systems must recognize and clear foreign invaders without eliciting autoimmunity. CRISPR-Cas immune systems in prokaryotes manage this task by following two criteria: extensive guide:target complementarity and a defined target-flanking motif. Here we report an additional requirement for RNA-targeting CRISPR-Cas13 systems: expression of the target transcript exceeding a threshold. This finding is based on targeting endogenous non-essential transcripts, which rarely elicited dormancy through collateral RNA degradation. Instead, eliciting dormancy required over-expressing targeted transcripts above a threshold. A genome-wide screen confirmed target expression levels as the principal determinant of cytotoxic autoimmunity and revealed that the threshold shifts with the guide:target pair. This expression threshold ensured defense against a lytic bacteriophage yet allowed tolerance of a targeted beneficial gene expressed from an invading plasmid. These findings establish target expression levels as a third criterion for immune activation by RNA-targeting CRISPR-Cas systems, buffering against autoimmunity and distinguishing pathogenic and benign invaders.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam M. Blanchard ◽  
Ceri E. Staley ◽  
Laurence Shaw ◽  
Sean R Wattegedera ◽  
Christina-Marie Baumbach ◽  
...  

Footrot is a polymicrobial infectious disease in sheep causing severe lameness, leading to one of the industry’s biggest welfare problems. The complex aetiology of footrot makes in-situ or in-vitro investigations difficult. Computational methods offer a solution to understanding the bacteria involved, how they may interact with the host and ultimately providing a way to identify targets for future hypotheses driven investigative work. Here we present the first combined global analysis of the bacterial community transcripts together with the host immune response in healthy and diseased ovine feet during a natural polymicrobial infection state using metatranscriptomics. The intra tissue and surface bacterial populations and the most abundant bacterial transcriptome were analysed, demonstrating footrot affected skin has a reduced diversity and increased abundances of, not only the causative bacteria Dichelobacter nodosus , but other species such as Mycoplasma fermentans and Porphyromonas asaccharolytica . Host transcriptomics reveals a suppression of biological processes relating to skin barrier function, vascular functions, and immunosurveillance in unhealthy interdigital skin, supported by histological findings that type I collagen (associated with scar tissue formation) is significantly increased in footrot affected interdigital skin comparted to outwardly healthy skin. Finally, we provide some interesting indications of host and pathogen interactions associated with virulence genes and the host spliceosome which could lead to the identification of future therapeutic targets. Impact Statement Lameness in sheep is a global welfare and economic concern and footrot is the leading cause of lameness, affecting up to 70% of flocks in the U.K. Current methods for control of this disease are labour intensive and account for approximately 65% of antibiotic use in sheep farming, whilst preventative vaccines suffer from poor efficacy due to antigen competition. Our limited understanding of cofounders, such as strain variation and polymicrobial nature of infection mean new efficacious, affordable and scalable control measures are not receiving much attention. Here we examine the surface and intracellular bacterial populations and propose potential interactions with the host. Identification of these key bacterial species involved in the initiation and progression of disease and the host immune mechanisms could help form the basis of new therapies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Li ◽  
Yanjie Chao

ABSTRACTSmall proteins shorter than 50 amino acids have been long overlooked. A number of small proteins have been identified in several model bacteria using experimental approaches and assigned important functions in diverse cellular processes. The recent development of ribosome profiling technologies has allowed a genome-wide identification of small proteins and small ORFs (smORFs), but our incomplete understanding of small proteins hinders de novo computational prediction of smORFs in non-model bacterial species. Here, we have identified several sequence features for smORFs by a systematic analysis of all the known small proteins in E. coli, among which the translation initiation rate is the strongest determinant. By integrating these features into a support vector machine learning model, we have developed a novel sPepFinder algorithm that can predict conserved smORFs in bacterial genomes with a high accuracy of 92.8%. De novo prediction in E. coli has revealed several novel smORFs with evidence of translation supported by ribosome profiling. Further application of sPepFinder in 549 bacterial species has led to the identification of > 100,000 novel smORFs, many of which are conserved at the amino acid and nucleotide levels under purifying selection. Overall, we have established sPepFinder as a valuable tool to identify novel smORFs in both model and non-model bacterial organisms, and provided a large resource of small proteins for functional characterizations.


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