Affiliation:
1. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Biomedical Center, Uppsala University, Uppsala 75124, Sweden
2. Uppsala Antibiotic Center, Uppsala University, Uppsala 75123, Sweden
Abstract
Type I toxin–antitoxin systems (T1TAs) are bipartite bacterial loci encoding a growth-inhibitory toxin and an antitoxin small RNA (sRNA). In many of these systems, the transcribed toxin mRNA is translationally inactive, but becomes translation-competent upon ribonucleolytic processing. The antitoxin sRNA targets the processed mRNA to inhibit its translation. This two-level control mechanism prevents cotranscriptional translation of the toxin and allows its synthesis only when the antitoxin is absent. Contrary to this, we found that the
timP
mRNA of the
timPR
T1TA locus does not undergo enzymatic processing. Instead, the full-length
timP
transcript is
both
translationally active and can be targeted by the antitoxin TimR. Thus, tight control in this system relies on a noncanonical mechanism. Based on the results from in vitro binding assays, RNA structure probing, and cell-free translation experiments, we suggest that
timP
mRNA adopts mutually exclusive structural conformations. The active form uniquely possesses an RNA pseudoknot structure which is essential for translation initiation. TimR preferentially binds to the active conformation, which leads to pseudoknot destabilization and inhibited translation. Based on this, we propose a model in which “structural processing” of
timP
mRNA enables tight inhibition by TimR in nonpermissive conditions, and TimP synthesis only upon TimR depletion.
Funder
Vetenskapsr&ådet
Uppsala Antibiotic Center
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Disentangling the pseudoknots of toxin translation;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2024-07-18