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The hok / sok and pnd systems of plasmids R1 and R483 mediate plasmid maintenance by killing plasmid-free cells. Translation of the exceptionally stable hok and pnd mRNAs is repressed by unstable antisense RNAs. The different stabilities of the killer mRNAs and their cognate repressors explain the onset of translation in plasmid-free cells. The full-length hok and pnd mRNAs are inert with respect to translation and antisense RNA binding. We have previously shown that the mRNAs contain two negative translational control elements. Thus, the mRNAs contain upstream anti-Shine–Dalgarno elements that repress translation by shielding the Shine–Dalgarno ele-ments. The mRNAs also contain fold-back-inhibition elements ( fbi  ) at their 3' ends that are required to maintain the inert mRNA configuration. Using genetic complementation, we show that the 3' fbi elements pair with the very 5' ends of the mRNAs. This pairing sets the low rate of 3' exonucleolytical processing, which is required for the accumulation of an activatable pool of mRNA. Unexpectedly, the hok and pnd mRNAs were found to contain translational activators at their 5' ends (termed tac  ). Thus, the fbi elements inhibit translation of the full-length mRNAs by sequestration of the tac elements. The fbi elements are removed by 3' exonucleolytical processing. Mutational ana-lyses indicate that the 3' processing triggers refolding of the mRNA 5' ends into translatable configurations in which the 5' tac elements base pair with the anti-Shine–Dalgarno sequences.  相似文献   

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T Thisted  A K Nielsen    K Gerdes 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(8):1950-1959
The gene systems hok/sok of R1, srnB of F and pnd of R483 mediate plasmid maintenance by killing of plasmid-free segregants. Translation of the very stable mRNAs encoding the killer proteins is regulated by small unstable antisense RNAs. The differential decay rates of the inhibitory antisense RNAs and the mRNAs encoding the killer proteins is the basis for the onset of killer mRNA translation in newborn plasmid-free segregants and the killing of these cells. We have suggested previously that this requires that the killer mRNAs occur in two forms. A translationally inactive form was proposed to be converted into a 3'-truncated, translationally active mRNA. In the presence of the antisense RNA, translation from this killer mRNA should be inhibited. In this communication we present in vivo and in vitro evidence that support this model. The requirement for 3'-processing for killer gene expression is demonstrated. By using in vitro techniques it is shown that full-length Hok mRNA is translationally inactive, whereas a 3'-end truncated version of the Hok mRNA is translationally active. In vitro secondary structure probing suggests that the 3'-end of the full-length Hok mRNA folds back onto the translational initiation region of the mok gene and thereby inhibits translation of the mRNA. By inference we conclude that the Pnd and SrnB mRNAs are regulated by a similar mechanism.  相似文献   

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The hok/sok locus of plasmid R1 mediates plasmid stabilization by the killing of plasmid-free cells. Many bacterial plasmids carry similar loci. For example, the F plasmid carries two hok homologues, flm and srnB, that mediate plasmid stabilization by this specialized type of programmed cell death. Here, we show that the chromosome of E. coli K-12 codes for five hok homologous loci, all of which specify Hok-like toxins. Three of the loci appear to be inactivated by the insertion elements IS150 or IS186 located close to but not in the toxin-encoding reading frames (i.e. hokA, hokC and hokE), one system is probably inactivated by point mutation (hokB), whereas the fifth system is inactivated by a major genetic rearrangement (hokD). In the ECOR collection of wild-type E. coli strains, we identified hokA and hokC loci without IS elements. A molecular and a genetic analysis show that the hokA and hokC loci specify unstable antisense RNAs and stable toxin-encoding mRNAs that are processed at their 3' ends. An alignment of the mRNA sequences reveals all the regulatory elements known to be required for correct folding and refolding of the plasmid-encoded mRNAs. The conserved elements include fbi that ensure a long-range interaction in the full-length mRNAs, and tac and antisense RNA target stem-loops that are required for translation and rapid antisense RNA binding of the processed mRNAs. Consistently, we find that the chromosome-encoded mRNAs are processed at their 3' ends, resulting in the presumed translationally active mRNAs. Despite the presence of all of the regulatory elements, the chromosome-encoded loci do not mediate plasmid stabilization by killing of plasmid-free cells. The chromosome-encoded mRNAs are poorly translated in vitro, thus yielding an explanation for the lacking phenotype. These observations suggest that the chromosomal hok-like genes may be induced by an as yet unknown signal.  相似文献   

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The hok/sok system of plasmid R1, which mediates plasmid stabilization by the killing of plasmid-free cells, codes for two RNA species, Sok antisense RNA and hok mRNA. Sok RNA, which is unstable, inhibits translation of the stable hok mRNA. The 64 nt Sok RNA folds into a single stem-loop domain with an 11 nt unstructured 5' domain. The initial recognition reaction between Sok RNA and hok mRNA takes place between the 5' domain and the complementary region in hok mRNA. In this communication we examine the metabolism of Sok antisense RNA. We find that RNase E cleaves the RNA 6 nt from its 5' end and that this cleavage initiates Sok RNA decay. The RNase E cleavage occurs in the part of Sok RNA that is responsible for the initial recognition of the target loop in hok mRNA and thus leads to functional inactivation of the antisense. The major RNase E cleavage product (denoted pSok-6) is rapidly degraded by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase). Thus, the RNase E cleavage tags pSok−6 for further rapid degradation by PNPase from its 3' end. We also show that Sok RNA is polyadenylated by poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I), and that the poly(A)-tailing is prerequisite for the rapid 3'-exonucleolytic degradation by PNPase.  相似文献   

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The hok killer gene family in gram-negative bacteria   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
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The gene systems srnB of plasmid F and pnd of plasmid R483 were discovered because of their induction by rifampicin. Induction caused membrane damage, RNase I influx, degradation of stable RNA and, consequently, cell killing. We show here that the srnB and pnd systems mediate efficient stabilization of a mini-R1 test-plasmid. We also show that the killer genes srnB' and pndA are regulated by antisense RNAs, and that the srnC- and pndB-encoded antisense RNAs, denoted SrnC- and PndB-RNAs, are unstable molecules of approximately 60 nucleotides. The srnB and pndA mRNAs were found to be very stable. The differential decay rates of the inhibitory antisense RNAs and the killer-gene-encoding mRNAs explain the induction of these gene systems by rifampicin. Furthermore, the observed plasmid-stabilization phenotype associated with the srnB and pnd systems is a consequence of this differential RNA decay: the newborn plasmid-free cells inherit the stable mRNAs, which, after decay of the unstable antisense RNAs, are translated into killer proteins, thus leading to selective killing of the plasmid-free segregants. Thus our observations lead us to conclude that the F srnB and R483 pnd systems are phenotypically indistinguishable from the R1 hok/sok system, despite a 50% dissimilarity at the level of DNA sequence.  相似文献   

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Efficient gene control by antisense RNA requires rapid bi-molecular interaction with a cognate target RNA. A comparative analysis revealed that a YUNR motif (Y=pyrimidine, R=purine) is ubiquitous in RNA recognition loops in antisense RNA-regulated gene systems. The (Y)UNR sequence motif specifies two intraloop hydrogen bonds forming U-turn structures in many anticodon-loops and all T-loops of tRNAs, the hammerhead ribozyme and in other conserved RNA loops. This structure creates a sharp bend in the RNA phosphate-backbone and presents the following three to four bases in a solvent-exposed, stacked configuration providing a scaffold for rapid interaction with complementary RNA. Sok antisense RNA from plasmid R1 inhibits translation of the hok mRNA by preventing ribosome entry at the mok Shine & Dalgarno element. The 5' single-stranded region of Sok-RNA recognizes a loop in the hok mRNA. We show here, that the initial pairing between Sok antisense RNA and its target in hok mRNA occurs with an observed second-order rate-constant of 2 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1). Mutations that eliminate the YUNR motif in the target loop of hok mRNA resulted in reduced antisense RNA pairing kinetics, whereas mutations maintaining the YUNR motif were silent. In addition, RNA phosphate-backbone accessibility probing by ethylnitrosourea was consistent with a U-turn structure formation promoted by the YUNR motif. Since the YUNR U-turn motif is present in the recognition units of many antisense/target pairs, the motif is likely to be a generally employed enhancer of RNA pairing rates. This suggestion is consistent with the re-interpretation of the mutational analyses of several antisense control systems including RNAI/RNAII of ColE1, CopA/CopT of R1 and RNA-IN/RNA-OUT of IS10.  相似文献   

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D C Pecota  C S Kim  K Wu  K Gerdes    T K Wood 《Applied microbiology》1997,63(5):1917-1924
To enhance plasmid segregational stability in bacterial cells, two pairs of independent postsegregational killing loci (genes which induce host killing upon plasmid loss) isolated from plasmids R1, R483, or RP4 (hok+/sok+ pnd+ or hok+/sok+ parDE+) were cloned into a common site of the beta-galactosidase expression vector pMJR1750 (ptac::lacZ+) to form a series of plasmids in which the effect of one or two stability loci on segregational plasmid stability could be discerned. Adding two antisense killer loci (hok+/sok+ pnd+) decreased the specific growth rate by 50% though they were more effective at reducing segregational instability than hok+/sok+ alone. With the ptac promoter induced fully (2.0 mM isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside) and no antibiotic selection pressure, the combination of a proteic killer locus (parDE+) with antisense killer loci (hok+/sok+) had a negligible impact on specific growth rate, maintained high beta-galactosidase expression, and led to a 30 and 190% increase in segregational stability (based on stable generations) as compared to plasmids containing either hok+/sok+ or parDE+ alone, respectively. Use of hok+/sok+ or parDE+ alone with high cloned-gene expression led to ninefold and fourfold increases in the number of stable generations, respectively. Two convenient cloning cassettes have been constructed to facilitate cloning the dual hok+/sok+ parDE+ and hok+/sok+ pnd+ killer systems.  相似文献   

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The recognition and rapid degradation of mRNAs with premature translation termination codons by the nonsense-mediated pathway of mRNA decay is an important RNA quality control system in eukaryotes. In mammals, the efficient recognition of these mRNAs is dependent upon exon junction complex proteins deposited on the RNA during pre-mRNA splicing. In yeast, splicing does not play a role in recognition of mRNAs that terminate translation prematurely, raising the possibility that proteins deposited during alternative pre-mRNA processing events such as 3' end formation might contribute to the distinction between normal and premature translation termination. We have utilized mRNAs with a 3' poly(A) tail generated by ribozyme cleavage to demonstrate that the normal process of 3' end cleavage and polyadenylation is not required for mRNA stability or the detection of a premature stop codon. Thus, in yeast, the distinction between normal and premature translation termination events is independent of both splicing and conventional 3' end formation.  相似文献   

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The parB locus of plasmid R1, which mediates plasmid stability via postsegregational killing of plasmid-free cells, encodes two genes, hok and sok. The hok gene product is a potent cell-killing protein. The hok gene is regulated at the translational level by the sok gene-encoded repressor, a small anti-sense RNA complementary to the hok mRNA. The hok mRNA is extraordinarily stable, while the sok RNA decays rapidly. The mechanism of postsegregational killing is explained by the following model; the sok RNA molecule rapidly disappears in cells that have lost a parB-carrying plasmid, leading to translation of the stable hok mRNA. Consequently, the Hok protein is synthesized and killing of the plasmid-free cell follows.  相似文献   

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K Schneider  C F Beck 《Gene》1988,74(2):559-563
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Translation of nonSTOP mRNA is repressed post-initiation in mammalian cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We investigated the fate of aberrant mRNAs lacking in-frame termination codons (called nonSTOP mRNA) in mammalian cells. We found that translation of nonSTOP mRNA was considerably repressed although a corresponding reduction of mRNA was not observed. The repression appears to be post-initiation since (i) repressed nonSTOP mRNAs were associated with polysomes, (ii) translation of IRES-initiated and uncapped nonSTOP mRNA were repressed, and (iii) protein production from nonSTOP mRNA associating with polysomes was significantly reduced when used to program an in vitro run-off translation assay. NonSTOP mRNAs distributed into lighter polysome fractions compared to control mRNAs encoding a stop codon, and a significant amount of heterogeneous polypeptides were produced during in vitro translation of nonSTOP RNAs, suggesting premature termination of ribosomes translating nonSTOP mRNA. Moreover, a run-off translation assay using hippuristanol and RNAse protection assays suggested the presence of a ribosome stalled at the 3' end of nonSTOP mRNAs. Taken together, these data indicate that ribosome stalling at the 3' end of nonSTOP mRNAs can block translation by preventing upstream translation events.  相似文献   

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