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Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains

The recent findings that the narrow-specificity endoribonuclease RNase III and the 5′ exonuclease RNase J1 are not essential in the Gram-positive model organism, Bacillus subtilis, facilitated a global analysis of internal 5′ ends that are generated or acted upon by these enzymes. An RNA-Seq protoco...

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Autores principales: DiChiara, Jeanne M., Liu, Bo, Figaro, Sabine, Condon, Ciarán, Bechhofer, David H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2016
Materias:
RNA
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26883633
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw073
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author DiChiara, Jeanne M.
Liu, Bo
Figaro, Sabine
Condon, Ciarán
Bechhofer, David H.
author_facet DiChiara, Jeanne M.
Liu, Bo
Figaro, Sabine
Condon, Ciarán
Bechhofer, David H.
author_sort DiChiara, Jeanne M.
collection PubMed
description The recent findings that the narrow-specificity endoribonuclease RNase III and the 5′ exonuclease RNase J1 are not essential in the Gram-positive model organism, Bacillus subtilis, facilitated a global analysis of internal 5′ ends that are generated or acted upon by these enzymes. An RNA-Seq protocol known as PARE (Parallel Analysis of RNA Ends) was used to capture 5′ monophosphorylated RNA ends in ribonuclease wild-type and mutant strains. Comparison of PARE peaks in strains with RNase III present or absent showed that, in addition to its well-known role in ribosomal (rRNA) processing, many coding sequences and intergenic regions appeared to be direct targets of RNase III. These target sites were, in most cases, not associated with a known antisense RNA. The PARE analysis also revealed an accumulation of 3′-proximal peaks that correlated with the absence of RNase J1, confirming the importance of RNase J1 in degrading RNA fragments that contain the transcription terminator structure. A significant result from the PARE analysis was the discovery of an endonuclease cleavage just 2 nts downstream of the 16S rRNA 3′ end. This latter observation begins to answer, at least for B. subtilis, a long-standing question on the exonucleolytic versus endonucleolytic nature of 16S rRNA maturation.
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spelling pubmed-48383702016-04-21 Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains DiChiara, Jeanne M. Liu, Bo Figaro, Sabine Condon, Ciarán Bechhofer, David H. Nucleic Acids Res RNA The recent findings that the narrow-specificity endoribonuclease RNase III and the 5′ exonuclease RNase J1 are not essential in the Gram-positive model organism, Bacillus subtilis, facilitated a global analysis of internal 5′ ends that are generated or acted upon by these enzymes. An RNA-Seq protocol known as PARE (Parallel Analysis of RNA Ends) was used to capture 5′ monophosphorylated RNA ends in ribonuclease wild-type and mutant strains. Comparison of PARE peaks in strains with RNase III present or absent showed that, in addition to its well-known role in ribosomal (rRNA) processing, many coding sequences and intergenic regions appeared to be direct targets of RNase III. These target sites were, in most cases, not associated with a known antisense RNA. The PARE analysis also revealed an accumulation of 3′-proximal peaks that correlated with the absence of RNase J1, confirming the importance of RNase J1 in degrading RNA fragments that contain the transcription terminator structure. A significant result from the PARE analysis was the discovery of an endonuclease cleavage just 2 nts downstream of the 16S rRNA 3′ end. This latter observation begins to answer, at least for B. subtilis, a long-standing question on the exonucleolytic versus endonucleolytic nature of 16S rRNA maturation. Oxford University Press 2016-04-20 2016-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4838370/ /pubmed/26883633 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw073 Text en © The Author(s) 2016. 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 RNA
DiChiara, Jeanne M.
Liu, Bo
Figaro, Sabine
Condon, Ciarán
Bechhofer, David H.
Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title_full Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title_fullStr Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title_full_unstemmed Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title_short Mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of Bacillus subtilis messenger RNAs and ribosomal RNAs in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
title_sort mapping of internal monophosphate 5′ ends of bacillus subtilis messenger rnas and ribosomal rnas in wild-type and ribonuclease-mutant strains
topic RNA
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26883633
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw073
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