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RNA. 2008 November; 14(11): 2417–2429.
doi: 10.1261/rna.1123908.
PMCID: PMC2578868
Polynucleotide phosphorylase hinders mRNA degradation upon ribosomal protein S1 overexpression in Escherichia coli
Federica Briani,1 Serena Curti,1,3 Francesca Rossi,1,4 Thomas Carzaniga,1 Pierluigi Mauri,2 and Gianni Dehò1
1Dipartimento di Scienze biomolecolari e Biotecnologie, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milano, Italy
2Istituto di Tecnologie Biomediche, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Segrate (Milan), Italy
3 Present addresses: INGM, Fondazione Istituto Nazionale Genetica Molecolare, Via F. Sforza 32, 20122 Milano, Italy.
4CNR, Istituto di Neuroscienze e Farmacologia Cellulare e Molecolare, Dipartimento di Farmacologia, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20129 Milano, Italy.
Reprint requests to: Federica Briani, Dipartimento di Scienze biomolecolari e Biotecnologie, Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 26, 20133 Milano, Italy; e-mail: federica.briani/at/unimi.it; fax: (39)02.5031.5044; or Gianni Dehò, Dipartimento di Scienze biomolecolari e Biotecnologie, Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 26, 20133 Milano, Italy; e-mail: gianni.deho/at/unimi.it; fax: (39)02.5031.5044.
Received April 4, 2008; Accepted July 29, 2008.
Abstract
The exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase, encoded by pnp) is a major player in bacterial RNA decay. In Escherichia coli, PNPase expression is post-transcriptionally regulated at the level of mRNA stability. The primary transcript is very efficiently processed by the endonuclease RNase III at a specific site and the processed pnp mRNA is rapidly degraded in a PNPase-dependent manner. While investigating the PNPase autoregulation mechanism we found, by UV-cross-linking experiments, that the ribosomal protein S1 in crude extracts binds to the pnp-mRNA leader region. We assayed the potential role of S1 protein in pnp gene regulation by modulating S1 expression from depletion to overexpression. We found that S1 depletion led to a sharp decrease of the amount of pnp and other tested mRNAs, as detected by Northern blotting, whereas S1 overexpression caused a strong stabilization of pnp and the other transcripts. Surprisingly, mRNA stabilization depended on PNPase, as it was not observed in a pnp deletion strain. PNPase-dependent stabilization, however, was not detected by chemical decay assay of bulk mRNA. Overall, our data suggest that PNPase exonucleolytic activity may be modulated by the translation potential of the target mRNAs and that, upon ribosomal protein S1 overexpression, PNPase protects from degradation a set of full-length mRNAs. It thus appears that a single mRNA species may be differentially targeted to either decay or PNPase-dependent stabilization, thus preventing its depletion in conditions of fast turnover.
Keywords: RNA degradation, translation regulation, ribosomal protein S1, PNPase