Affiliation:
1. Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-7223
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
mrsC
gene of
Escherichia coli
is required for mRNA turnover and cell growth, and strains containing the temperature-sensitive
mrsC505
allele have longer half-lives than wild-type controls for total pulse-labeled and individual mRNAs (L. L. Granger et al., J. Bacteriol. 180:1920–1928, 1998). The cloned
mrsC
gene contains a long open reading frame beginning at an initiator UUG codon, confirmed by N-terminal amino acid sequencing, encoding a 70,996-Da protein with a consensus ATP-binding domain.
mrsC
is identical to the independently identified
ftsH
gene except for three additional amino acids at the N terminus (T. Tomoyasu et al., J. Bacteriol. 175:1344–1351, 1993). The purified protein had a
K
m
of 28 μM for ATP and a
V
max
of 21.2 nmol/μg/min. An amino-terminal glutathione
S
-transferase–MrsC fusion protein retained ATPase activity but was not biologically active. A glutamic acid replacement of the highly conserved lysine within the ATP-binding motif (
mrsC201
) abolished the complementation of the
mrsC505
mutation, confirming that the ATPase activity is required for MrsC function in vivo. In addition, the
mrsC505
allele conferred a temperature-sensitive HflB phenotype, while the
hflB29
mutation promoted mRNA stability at both 30 and 44°C, suggesting that the inviability associated with the
mrsC505
allele is not related to the defect in mRNA decay. The data presented provide the first direct evidence for the involvement of a membrane-bound protein in mRNA decay in
E. coli.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
27 articles.
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