4.6 Article

Escherichia coli protein synthesis is limited by mRNA availability rather than ribosomal capacity during phosphate starvation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.989818

Keywords

phosphate starvation; protein synthesis regulation; macromolecular synthesis; resource allocation; rRNA stability; bacterial stress response; Escherichia coli

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Protein synthesis is a highly regulated and energetically costly process in cells. This study investigates the response of Escherichia coli to phosphate starvation and reveals that protein synthesis is primarily limited by the availability of template mRNA rather than the capacity of ribosomes. This limitation is an adaptive response to prevent overcommitting resources to protein synthesis. Furthermore, the degradation of ribosomal RNA is influenced by the availability of idle ribosomal subunits.
Protein synthesis is the most energetically costly process in the cell. Consequently, it is a tightly regulated process, and regulation of the resources allocated to the protein synthesis machinery is at the heart of bacterial growth optimization theory. However, the molecular mechanisms that result in dynamic downregulation of protein synthesis in response to nutrient starvation are not well described. Here, we first quantify the Escherichia coli response to phosphate starvation at the level of accumulation rates for protein, RNA and DNA. Escherichia coli maintains a low level of protein synthesis for hours after the removal of phosphate while the RNA contents decrease, primarily as a consequence of ribosomal RNA degradation combined with a reduced RNA synthesis rate. To understand the molecular basis for the low protein synthesis rate of phosphate-starved cells, template mRNA for translation was overproduced in the form of a highly induced long-lived mRNA. Remarkably, starved cells increased the rate of protein synthesis and reduced the rate of ribosomal RNA degradation upon mRNA induction. These observations suggest that protein synthesis in phosphate-starved cells is primarily limited by the availability of template, and does not operate at the maximum capacity of the ribosomes. We suggest that mRNA limitation is an adaptive response to phosphate starvation that prevents the deleterious consequences of overcommitting resources to protein synthesis. Moreover, our results support the model that degradation of ribosomal RNA occurs as a consequence of the availability of idle ribosomal subunits.

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