4.5 Article

Nus transcription elongation factors and RNase III modulate small ribosome subunit biogenesis in Escherichia coli

Journal

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 2, Pages 382-393

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mmi.12105

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
  2. Trans National Institutes of Health/National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Disease
  3. Public Health Service Grant [AI11459- 10]
  4. Syrian Government
  5. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) [UPR 9073]
  6. Universite Paris 7-Diderot
  7. NIH [GM37219]

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Escherichia coli NusA and NusB proteins bind specific sites, such as those in the leader and spacer sequences that flank the 16S region of the ribosomal RNA transcript, forming a complex with RNA polymerase that suppresses Rho-dependent transcription termination. Although antitermination has long been the accepted role for Nus factors in rRNA synthesis, we propose that another major role for the Nus-modified transcription complex in rrn operons is as an RNA chaperone insuring co-ordination of 16S rRNA folding and RNase III processing that results in production of proper 30S ribosome subunits. This contrarian proposal is based on our studies of nusA and nusB cold-sensitive mutations that have altered translation and at low temperature accumulate 30S subunit precursors. Both phenotypes are suppressed by deletion of RNase III. We argue that these results are consistent with the idea that the nus mutations cause altered rRNA folding that leads to abnormal 30S subunits and slow translation. According to this idea, functional Nus proteins stabilize an RNA loop between their binding sites in the 5' RNA leader and on the transcribing RNA polymerase, providing a topological constraint on the RNA that aids normal rRNA folding and processing.

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