Affiliation:
1. Edward A. Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Members of the Erm methyltransferase family modify 23S rRNA of the bacterial ribosome and render cross-resistance to macrolides and multiple distantly related antibiotics. Previous studies have shown that the expression of
erm
is activated when a macrolide-bound ribosome stalls the translation of the leader peptide preceding the cotranscribed
erm
. Ribosome stalling is thought to destabilize the inhibitory stem-loop mRNA structure and exposes the
erm
Shine-Dalgarno (SD) sequence for translational initiation. Paradoxically, mutations that abolish ribosome stalling are routinely found in hyper-resistant clinical isolates; however, the significance of the stalling-dead leader sequence is largely unknown. Here, we show that nonsense mutations in the
Staphylococcus aureus
ErmB leader peptide (ErmBL) lead to high basal and induced expression of downstream ErmB in the absence or presence of macrolide concomitantly with elevated ribosome methylation and resistance. The overexpression of ErmB is associated with the reduced turnover of the
ermBL-ermB
transcript, and the macrolide appears to mitigate mRNA cleavage at a site immediately downstream of the
ermBL
SD sequence. The stabilizing effect of antibiotics on mRNA is not limited to
ermBL-ermB
; cationic antibiotics representing a ribosome-stalling inducer and a noninducer increase the half-life of specific transcripts. These data unveil a new layer of
ermB
regulation and imply that ErmBL translation or ribosome stalling serves as a “tuner” to suppress aberrant production of ErmB because methylated ribosome may impose a fitness cost on the bacterium as a result of misregulated translation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
34 articles.
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