4.4 Article

Ribosomal RNA degradation induced by the bacterial RNA polymerase inhibitor rifampicin

Journal

RNA
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 946-958

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.078776.121

Keywords

cell size; mRNA degradation; rifampicin; ribosomal RNA degradation; RNase E; PNPase; RNase R

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (IB-mRND) [ANR-16-CE12-0014-02]
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-16-CE12-0014] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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Rifampicin treatment causes a decrease in cell size and total RNA content in E. coli, primarily due to a decrease in 23S and 16S rRNA levels. While rRNA degradation is not complete, growth can be reinitiated after removal of rifampicin. Analysis of mutant strains suggests RNase E, PNPase, and RNase R are involved in rifampicin-induced rRNA degradation, potentially impacting mRNA degradation rates as well.
Rifampicin, a broad-spectrum antibiotic, inhibits bacterial RNA polymerase. Here we show that rifampicin treatment of Escherichia coli results in a 50% decrease in cell size due to a terminal cell division. This decrease is a consequence of inhibition of transcription as evidenced by an isogenic rifampicin-resistant strain. There is also a 50% decrease in total RNA due mostly to a 90% decrease in 23S and 16S rRNA levels. Control experiments showed this decrease is not an artifact of our RNA purification protocol and therefore due to degradation in vivo. Since chromosome replication continues after rifampicin treatment, ribonucleotides from rRNA degradation could be recycled for DNA synthesis. Rifampicin-induced rRNA degradation occurs under different growth conditions and in different strain backgrounds. However, rRNA degradation is never complete, thus permitting the reinitiation of growth after removal of rifampicin. The orderly shutdown of growth under conditions where the induction of stress genes is blocked by rifampicin is noteworthy. Inhibition of protein synthesis by chloramphenicol resulted in a partial decrease in 23S and 16S rRNA levels whereas kasugamycin treatment had no effect. Analysis of temperature-sensitive mutant strains implicate RNase E, PNPase, and RNase R in rifampicin-induced rRNA degradation. We cannot distinguish between a direct role for RNase E in rRNA degradation versus an indirect role involving a slowdown of mRNA degradation. Since mRNA and rRNA appear to be degraded by the same ribonucleases, competition by rRNA is likely to result in slower mRNA degradation rates in the presence of rifampicin than under normal growth conditions.

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