arfA antisense RNA regulates MscL excretory activity

Excretion of cytoplasmic protein (ECP) is a commonly observed phenomenon in bacteria, and this partial extracellular localisation of the intracellular proteome has been implicated in a variety of stress response mechanisms. In response to hypoosmotic shock and ribosome stalling in , ECP is dependent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Life science alliance 2023-06, Vol.6 (6), p.e202301954
Hauptverfasser: Morra, Rosa, Pratama, Fenryco, Butterfield, Thomas, Tomazetto, Geizecler, Young, Kate, Lopez, Ruth, Dixon, Neil
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Excretion of cytoplasmic protein (ECP) is a commonly observed phenomenon in bacteria, and this partial extracellular localisation of the intracellular proteome has been implicated in a variety of stress response mechanisms. In response to hypoosmotic shock and ribosome stalling in , ECP is dependent upon the presence of the large-conductance mechanosensitive channel and the alternative ribosome-rescue factor A gene products. However, it is not known if a mechanistic link exists between the corresponding genes and the respective stress response pathways. Here, we report that the corresponding and genes are commonly co-located on the genomes of Gammaproteobacteria and display overlap in their respective 3' UTR and 3' CDS. We show this unusual genomic arrangement permits an antisense RNA-mediated regulatory control between and , and this modulates MscL excretory activity in These findings highlight a mechanistic link between osmotic, translational stress responses and ECP in , further elucidating the previously unknown regulatory function of sRNA.
ISSN:2575-1077
2575-1077
DOI:10.26508/lsa.202301954