4.8 Article

Np4A alarmones function in bacteria as precursors to RNA caps

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1914229117

Keywords

diadenosine tetraphosphate; Ap(4)A; Ap(3)A; non-canonical initiating nucleotide; ApaH

Funding

  1. NIH [T32AI007180, R01 GM035769, R01 GM112940]
  2. Vilcek Endowment

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Stresses that increase the cellular concentration of dinucleoside tetraphosphates (Np(4)Ns) have recently been shown to impact RNA degradation by inducing nucleoside tetraphosphate (Np-4) capping of bacterial transcripts. However, neither the mechanism by which such caps are acquired nor the function of Np(4)Ns in bacteria is known. Here we report that promoter sequence changes upstream of the site of transcription initiation similarly affect both the efficiency with which Escherichia coli RNA polymerase incorporates dinucleoside polyphosphates at the 5' end of nascent transcripts in vitro and the percentage of transcripts that are Np-4-capped in E. coli, clear evidence for Np-4 cap acquisition by Np4N incorporation during transcription initiation in bacterial cells. E. coli RNA polymerase initiates transcription more efficiently with Np4As than with ATP, particularly when the coding strand nucleotide that immediately precedes the initiation site is a purine. Together, these findings indicate that Np(4)Ns function in bacteria as precursors to Np-4 caps and that RNA polymerase has evolved a predilection for synthesizing capped RNA whenever such precursors are abundant.

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