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<i>Caulobacter crescentus</i> RNase E condensation contributes to autoregulation and fitness

Vidhyadhar Nandana, Nadra Al-Husini, Arti Vaishnav, Kulathungage H. Dilrangi, Jared M. Schrader

2024Molecular Biology of the Cell12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

RNase E is the most common RNA decay nuclease in bacteria, setting the global mRNA decay rate and scaffolding formation of the RNA degradosome complex and BR-bodies. To properly set the global mRNA decay rate, RNase E from Escherichia coli and neighboring γ-proteobacteria were found to autoregulate RNase E levels via the decay of its mRNA’s 5′ untranslated region (UTR). While the 5′ UTR is absent from other groups of bacteria in the Rfam database, we identified that the α-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus RNase E contains a similar 5′ UTR structure that promotes RNase E autoregulation. In both bacteria, the C-terminal intrinsically disordered region (IDR) of RNase E is required for proper autoregulation to occur, and this IDR is also necessary and sufficient for RNase E to phase-separate, generating BR-bodies. Using in vitro purified RNase E, we find that the IDR’s ability to promote phase separation correlates with enhanced 5′ UTR cleavage, suggesting that phase separation of RNase E with the 5′ UTR enhances autoregulation. Finally, using growth competition experiments, we find that a strain capable of autoregulation rapidly outcompetes a strain with a 5′ UTR mutation that cannot autoregulate, suggesting autoregulation promotes optimal cellular fitness.

Topics & Concepts

Caulobacter crescentusRNase PBiologyDegradosomeRNase HRibonuclease IIIRNACell biologyMessenger RNARNase MRPUntranslated regionGeneticsGeneRNA interferenceCell cycleBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyBacteriophages and microbial interactionsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms