Literature DB >> 1722558

The rifampicin-inducible genes srnB from F and pnd from R483 are regulated by antisense RNAs and mediate plasmid maintenance by killing of plasmid-free segregants.

A K Nielsen1, P Thorsted, T Thisted, E G Wagner, K Gerdes.   

Abstract

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.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1722558     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.1991.tb00818.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Microbiol        ISSN: 0950-382X            Impact factor:   3.501


  14 in total

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