4.7 Review

The bacterial translation stress response

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY REVIEWS
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 1172-1201

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/1574-6976.12083

Keywords

nutrient depletion; translational stalling; toxin-antitoxin modules; mRNA truncation; stationary phase; antibiotic stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [FOR1805, WI3285/4-1, Exc114-2]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIHR01GM095737]
  3. EMBO Young Investigator Program
  4. AXA Research Fund Postdoctoral Fellowship

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Throughout their life, bacteria need to sense and respond to environmental stress. Thus, such stress responses can require dramatic cellular reprogramming, both at the transcriptional as well as the translational level. This review focuses on the protein factors that interact with the bacterial translational apparatus to respond to and cope with different types of environmental stress. For example, the stringent factor RelA interacts with the ribosome to generate ppGpp under nutrient deprivation, whereas a variety of factors have been identified that bind to the ribosome under unfavorable growth conditions to shut-down (RelE, pY, RMF, HPF and EttA) or re-program (MazF, EF4 and BipA) translation. Additional factors have been identified that rescue ribosomes stalled due to stress-induced mRNA truncation (tmRNA, ArfA, ArfB), translation of unfavorable protein sequences (EF-P), heat shock-induced subunit dissociation (Hsp15), or antibiotic inhibition (TetM, FusB). Understanding the mechanism of how the bacterial cell responds to stress will not only provide fundamental insight into translation regulation, but will also be an important step to identifying new targets for the development of novel antimicrobial agents.

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