Faculty Opinions recommendation of DksA guards elongating RNA polymerase against ribosome-stalling-induced arrest.

Author(s):  
Peter McGlynn
2007 ◽  
Vol 189 (13) ◽  
pp. 4872-4879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Ranquet ◽  
Susan Gottesman

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli cell viability during starvation is strongly dependent on the expression of the rpoS gene, encoding the RpoS sigma subunit of RNA polymerase. RpoS abundance has been reported to be regulated at many levels, including transcription initiation, translation, and protein stability. The regulatory RNA SsrA (or tmRNA) has both tRNA and mRNA activities, relieving ribosome stalling and cotranslationally tagging proteins. We report here that SsrA is needed for the correct high-level translation of RpoS. The ATP-dependent protease Lon was also found to negatively affect RpoS translation, but only at low temperature. We suggest that SsrA may indirectly improve RpoS translation by limiting ribosome stalling and depletion of some component of the translation machinery.


2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 766-778 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Rachel A. Mooney ◽  
Jeffrey A. Grass ◽  
Priya Sivaramakrishnan ◽  
Christophe Herman ◽  
...  

mBio ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Yakhnin ◽  
Alexander V. Yakhnin ◽  
Brandon L. Mouery ◽  
Zachary F. Mandell ◽  
Catherine Karbasiafshar ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Macrolide antibiotics bind to 23S rRNA within the peptide exit tunnel of the ribosome, causing the translating ribosome to stall when an appropriately positioned macrolide arrest motif is encountered in the nascent polypeptide. Tylosin is a macrolide antibiotic produced by Streptomyces fradiae. Resistance to tylosin in S. fradiae is conferred by methylation of 23S rRNA by TlrD and RlmAII. Here, we demonstrate that yxjB encodes RlmAII in Bacillus subtilis and that YxjB-specific methylation of 23S rRNA in the peptide exit tunnel confers tylosin resistance. Growth in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of tylosin results in increased rRNA methylation and increased resistance. In the absence of tylosin, yxjB expression is repressed by transcription attenuation and translation attenuation mechanisms. Tylosin-dependent induction of yxjB expression relieves these two repression mechanisms. Induction requires tylosin-dependent ribosome stalling at an RYR arrest motif at the C terminus of a leader peptide encoded upstream of yxjB. Furthermore, NusG-dependent RNA polymerase pausing between the leader peptide and yxjB coding sequences is essential for tylosin-dependent induction. Pausing synchronizes the position of RNA polymerase with ribosome position such that the stalled ribosome prevents transcription termination and formation of an RNA structure that sequesters the yxjB ribosome binding site. On the basis of our results, we are renaming yxjB as tlrB. IMPORTANCE Antibiotic resistance is a growing health concern. Resistance mechanisms have evolved that provide bacteria with a growth advantage in their natural habitat such as the soil. We determined that B. subtilis, a Gram-positive soil organism, has a mechanism of resistance to tylosin, a macrolide antibiotic commonly used in the meat industry. Tylosin induces expression of yxjB, which encodes an enzyme that methylates 23S rRNA. YxjB-dependent methylation of 23S rRNA confers tylosin resistance. NusG-dependent RNA polymerase pausing and tylosin-dependent ribosome stalling induce yxjB expression, and hence tylosin resistance, by preventing transcription termination upstream of the yxjB coding sequence and by preventing repression of yxjB translation.


Author(s):  
E. Loren Buhle ◽  
Pamela Rew ◽  
Ueli Aebi

While DNA-dependent RNA polymerase represents one of the key enzymes involved in transcription and ultimately in gene expression in procaryotic and eucaryotic cells, little progress has been made towards elucidation of its 3-D structure at the molecular level over the past few years. This is mainly because to date no 3-D crystals suitable for X-ray diffraction analysis have been obtained with this rather large (MW ~500 kd) multi-subunit (α2ββ'ζ). As an alternative, we have been trying to form ordered arrays of RNA polymerase from E. coli suitable for structural analysis in the electron microscope combined with image processing. Here we report about helical polymers induced from holoenzyme (α2ββ'ζ) at low ionic strength with 5-7 mM MnCl2 (see Fig. 1a). The presence of the ζ-subunit (MW 86 kd) is required to form these polymers, since the core enzyme (α2ββ') does fail to assemble into such structures under these conditions.


2006 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 85-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J. Reece ◽  
Laila Beynon ◽  
Stacey Holden ◽  
Amanda D. Hughes ◽  
Karine Rébora ◽  
...  

The recognition of changes in environmental conditions, and the ability to adapt to these changes, is essential for the viability of cells. There are numerous well characterized systems by which the presence or absence of an individual metabolite may be recognized by a cell. However, the recognition of a metabolite is just one step in a process that often results in changes in the expression of whole sets of genes required to respond to that metabolite. In higher eukaryotes, the signalling pathway between metabolite recognition and transcriptional control can be complex. Recent evidence from the relatively simple eukaryote yeast suggests that complex signalling pathways may be circumvented through the direct interaction between individual metabolites and regulators of RNA polymerase II-mediated transcription. Biochemical and structural analyses are beginning to unravel these elegant genetic control elements.


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