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Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C

Microcin C (McC) is a peptide–nucleotide antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli cells harboring a plasmid-borne operon mccABCDE. The heptapeptide MccA is converted into McC by adenylation catalyzed by the MccB enzyme. Since MccA is a substrate for MccB, a mechanism that regulates the MccA/MccB rati...

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Autores principales: Zukher, Inna, Novikova, Maria, Tikhonov, Anton, Nesterchuk, Mikhail V., Osterman, Ilya A., Djordjevic, Marko, Sergiev, Petr V., Sharma, Cynthia M., Severinov, Konstantin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2014
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4231749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25274735
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku880
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author Zukher, Inna
Novikova, Maria
Tikhonov, Anton
Nesterchuk, Mikhail V.
Osterman, Ilya A.
Djordjevic, Marko
Sergiev, Petr V.
Sharma, Cynthia M.
Severinov, Konstantin
author_facet Zukher, Inna
Novikova, Maria
Tikhonov, Anton
Nesterchuk, Mikhail V.
Osterman, Ilya A.
Djordjevic, Marko
Sergiev, Petr V.
Sharma, Cynthia M.
Severinov, Konstantin
author_sort Zukher, Inna
collection PubMed
description Microcin C (McC) is a peptide–nucleotide antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli cells harboring a plasmid-borne operon mccABCDE. The heptapeptide MccA is converted into McC by adenylation catalyzed by the MccB enzyme. Since MccA is a substrate for MccB, a mechanism that regulates the MccA/MccB ratio likely exists. Here, we show that transcription from a promoter located upstream of mccA directs the synthesis of two transcripts: a short highly abundant transcript containing the mccA ORF and a longer minor transcript containing mccA and downstream ORFs. The short transcript is generated when RNA polymerase terminates transcription at an intrinsic terminator located in the intergenic region between the mccA and mccB genes. The function of this terminator is strongly attenuated by upstream mcc sequences. Attenuation is relieved and transcription termination is induced when ribosome binds to the mccA ORF. Ribosome binding also makes the mccA RNA exceptionally stable. Together, these two effects—ribosome-induced transcription termination and stabilization of the message—account for very high abundance of the mccA transcript that is essential for McC production. The general scheme appears to be evolutionary conserved as ribosome-induced transcription termination also occurs in a homologous operon from Helicobacter pylori.
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spelling pubmed-42317492014-11-21 Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C Zukher, Inna Novikova, Maria Tikhonov, Anton Nesterchuk, Mikhail V. Osterman, Ilya A. Djordjevic, Marko Sergiev, Petr V. Sharma, Cynthia M. Severinov, Konstantin Nucleic Acids Res Gene regulation, Chromatin and Epigenetics Microcin C (McC) is a peptide–nucleotide antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli cells harboring a plasmid-borne operon mccABCDE. The heptapeptide MccA is converted into McC by adenylation catalyzed by the MccB enzyme. Since MccA is a substrate for MccB, a mechanism that regulates the MccA/MccB ratio likely exists. Here, we show that transcription from a promoter located upstream of mccA directs the synthesis of two transcripts: a short highly abundant transcript containing the mccA ORF and a longer minor transcript containing mccA and downstream ORFs. The short transcript is generated when RNA polymerase terminates transcription at an intrinsic terminator located in the intergenic region between the mccA and mccB genes. The function of this terminator is strongly attenuated by upstream mcc sequences. Attenuation is relieved and transcription termination is induced when ribosome binds to the mccA ORF. Ribosome binding also makes the mccA RNA exceptionally stable. Together, these two effects—ribosome-induced transcription termination and stabilization of the message—account for very high abundance of the mccA transcript that is essential for McC production. The general scheme appears to be evolutionary conserved as ribosome-induced transcription termination also occurs in a homologous operon from Helicobacter pylori. Oxford University Press 2014-10-29 2014-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4231749/ /pubmed/25274735 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku880 Text en © The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Gene regulation, Chromatin and Epigenetics
Zukher, Inna
Novikova, Maria
Tikhonov, Anton
Nesterchuk, Mikhail V.
Osterman, Ilya A.
Djordjevic, Marko
Sergiev, Petr V.
Sharma, Cynthia M.
Severinov, Konstantin
Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title_full Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title_fullStr Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title_full_unstemmed Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title_short Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C
title_sort ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin c
topic Gene regulation, Chromatin and Epigenetics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4231749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25274735
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku880
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