| Literature DB >> 28560584 |
Bork A Berghoff1, E Gerhart H Wagner2.
Abstract
Bacterial dormancy is a valuable survival strategy upon challenging environmental conditions. Dormant cells tolerate the consequences of high stress levels and may re-populate the environment upon return to favorable conditions. Antibiotic-tolerant bacteria-termed persisters-regularly cause relapsing infections, increase the likelihood of antibiotic resistance, and, therefore, earn increasing attention. Their generation often depends on toxins from chromosomal toxin-antitoxin systems. Here, we review recent insights concerning RNA-based control of toxin synthesis, and discuss possible implications for persister generation.Entities:
Keywords: 5′ UTR structure; Antisense RNA; Depolarization; Persistence; SOS response; Toxin–antitoxin
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28560584 PMCID: PMC5668327 DOI: 10.1007/s00294-017-0710-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Genet ISSN: 0172-8083 Impact factor: 3.886
Fig. 1Synthesis of Hok toxins is controlled by two regulatory RNA elements. The arrangement of the hok/sok gene locus is depicted in the upper part of the figure. Arrows indicate promoters. The primary mok–hok mRNA (398 nt) is translationally inert due to inhibitory secondary structures. 3′ processing generates a translationally active mRNA (361 nt), that is either inhibited by the RNA antitoxin Sok or translated into Hok toxin. Sok binding initiates at the target loop, and the RNA duplex that subsequently forms (indicated by blue arrow) is cleaved by RNase III. Plasmid-borne systems are implicated in post-segregational killing, and chromosomal systems contribute to bacterial persistence. SD Shine-Dalgarno sequence. Figure based on Gerdes and Wagner (2007). See text for details
Fig. 2RNA-based regulation of the SOS-responsive toxins TisB and DinQ. The loci for tisB/istR-1 (a) and dinQ/agrAB (b) are depicted in the upper part of the figure. Arrows indicate promoters and red boxes represent binding sites for LexA. In both cases, primary mRNAs (+1) are translationally inert due to secondary structures that prevent ribosome binding. 5′ processing generates translationally active mRNAs (tisB +42 or dinQ +44) with accessible sites for ribosome loading. The active mRNAs are either inhibited by their cognate RNA antitoxins, or translated into toxin. Both TisB and DinQ are implicated in persister formation under SOS conditions. AUG/GUG: start codon; SD Shine-Dalgarno sequence, RSS ribosome standby site. See text for details