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Rapid Degradation of Host mRNAs by Stimulation of RNase E Activity by Srd of Bacteriophage T4.

Authors :
Dan Qi
Alawneh, Abdulraheem M.
Tetsuro Yonesaki
Yuichi Otsuka
Source :
Genetics. Nov2015, Vol. 201 Issue 3, p977-8SI. 19p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Escherichia coli messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are rapidly degraded immediately after bacteriophage T4 infection, and the host RNase E contributes to this process. Here, we found that a previously uncharacterized factor of T4 phage, Srd (Similarity with rpoD), was involved in T4-induced host mRNA degradation. The rapid decay of ompA and lpp mRNAs was partially alleviated and a decay intermediate of lpp mRNA rapidly accumulated in cells infected with T4 phage lacking srd. Exogenous expression of Srd in uninfected cells significantly accelerated the decay of these mRNAs. In addition, lpp(T) RNA, with a sequence identical to the decay intermediate of lpp mRNA and a triphosphate at 59-end, was also destabilized by Srd. The destabilization of these RNAs by Srd was not observed in RNase E-defective cells. The initial cleavage of a primary transcript by RNase E can be either direct or dependent on the 59-end of transcript. In the latter case, host RppH is required to convert the triphosphate at 5'-end to a monophosphate. lpp(T) RNA, but not lpp and ompA mRNAs, required RppH for Srd-stimulated degradation, indicating that Srd stimulates both 59-end-dependent and -independent cleavage activities of RNase E. Furthermore, pull-down and immunoprecipitation analyses strongly suggested that Srd physically associates with the N-terminal half of RNase E containing the catalytic moiety and the membrane target sequence. Finally, the growth of T4 phage was significantly decreased by the disruption of srd. These results strongly suggest that the stimulation of RNase E activity by T4 Srd is required for efficient phage growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00166731
Volume :
201
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110959104
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.115.180364