Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
2. Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
OLE (ornate, large, extremophilic) RNAs are members of a noncoding RNA class present in many Gram-positive, extremophilic bacteria. The large size, complex structure, and extensive sequence conservation of OLE RNAs are characteristics consistent with the hypothesis that they likely function as ribozymes. The OLE RNA representative from
Halalkalibacterium halodurans
is known to localize to the phospholipid membrane and requires at least three essential protein partners: OapA, OapB, and OapC. However, the precise biochemical functions of this unusual ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex remain unknown. Genetic disruption of OLE RNA or its partners revealed that the complex is beneficial under diverse stress conditions. To search for additional links between OLE RNA and other cellular components, we used phylogenetic profiling to identify proteins that are either correlated or anticorrelated with the presence of OLE RNA in various bacterial species. This analysis revealed strong correlations between the essential protein-binding partners of OLE RNA and organisms that carry the
ole
gene. Similarly, proteins involved in sporulation are correlated, suggesting a potential role for the OLE RNP complex in spore formation. Intriguingly, the Mg
2+
transporter MpfA is strongly anticorrelated with OLE RNA. Evidence indicates that MpfA is structurally related to OapA and therefore MpfA may serve as a functional replacement for some contributions otherwise performed by the OLE RNP complex in species that lack this device. Indeed, OLE RNAs might represent an ancient RNA class that enabled primitive organisms to sense and respond to major cellular stresses.
IMPORTANCE
OLE (ornate, large, extremophilic) RNAs were first reported nearly 20 years ago, and they represent one of the largest and most intricately folded noncoding RNA classes whose biochemical function remains to be established. Other RNAs with similar size, structural complexity, and extent of sequence conservation have proven to catalyze chemical transformations. Therefore, we speculate that OLE RNAs likewise operate as ribozymes and that they might catalyze a fundamental reaction that has persisted since the RNA World era—a time before the emergence of proteins in evolution. To seek additional clues regarding the function of OLE RNA, we undertook a computational effort to identify potential protein components of the OLE ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex or other proteins that have functional links to this device. This analysis revealed known protein partners and several additional proteins that might be physically or functionally linked to the OLE RNP complex. Finally, we identified a Mg
2+
transporter protein, MpfA, that strongly anticorrelates with the OLE RNP complex. This latter result suggests that MpfA might perform at least some functions that are like those carried out by the OLE RNP complex.
Funder
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology