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Mycobacterial RNase E cleaves with a distinct sequence preference and controls the degradation rates of most Mycolicibacterium smegmatis mRNAs

Ying Zhou, Huaming Sun, Abigail R. Rapiejko, Diego A. Vargas-Blanco, María Carla Martini, Michael R. Chase, Samantha Joubran, Alexa B. Davis, Joseph Dainis, Jessica M. Kelly, Thomas R. Ioerger, Louis A. Roberts, Sarah M. Fortune, Scarlet S. Shell

2023Journal of Biological Chemistry11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The mechanisms and regulation of RNA degradation in mycobacteria have been subject to increased interest following the identification of interplay between RNA metabolism and drug resistance. Mycobacteria encode multiple ribonucleases predicted to participate in mRNA degradation and/or processing of stable RNAs. RNase E is hypothesized to play a major role in mRNA degradation because of its essentiality in mycobacteria and its role in mRNA degradation in gram-negative bacteria. Here, we defined the impact of RNase E on mRNA degradation rates transcriptome-wide in the nonpathogenic model Mycolicibacterium smegmatis. RNase E played a rate-limiting role in degradation of the transcripts encoded by at least 89% of protein-coding genes, with leadered transcripts often being more affected by RNase E repression than leaderless transcripts. There was an apparent global slowing of transcription in response to knockdown of RNase E, suggesting that M. smegmatis regulates transcription in responses to changes in mRNA degradation. This compensation was incomplete, as the abundance of most transcripts increased upon RNase E knockdown. We assessed the sequence preferences for cleavage by RNase E transcriptome-wide in M. smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis and found a consistent bias for cleavage in C-rich regions. Purified RNase E had a clear preference for cleavage immediately upstream of cytidines, distinct from the sequence preferences of RNase E in gram-negative bacteria. We furthermore report a high-resolution map of mRNA cleavage sites in M. tuberculosis, which occur primarily within the RNase E-preferred sequence context, confirming that RNase E has a broad impact on the M. tuberculosis transcriptome.

Topics & Concepts

EndoribonucleaseRNase PRNase MRPBiologyRNase HRNAMycobacterium smegmatisMessenger RNAMolecular biologyRibonuclease IIITranscription (linguistics)GeneGeneticsRNA interferenceMycobacterium tuberculosisMedicinePhilosophyLinguisticsTuberculosisPathologyMycobacterium research and diagnosisRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology