Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.8 (polynucleotide phosphorylase)
723 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

vacB, a gene previously shown to be required for expression of virulence in Shigella and enteroinvasive Escherichia coli, has been found to encode the 3'-5' exoribonuclease, RNase R. Thus, cloning of E. coli vacB led to overexpression of RNase R activity, and partial deletion or interruption of the cloned gene abolished this overexpression. Interruption of the chromosomal copy of vacB eliminated endogenous RNase R activity; however, the absence of RNase R by itself had no effect on cell growth. In contrast, cells lacking both RNase R and polynucleotide phosphorylase were found to be inviable. These data indicate that RNase R participates in an essential cell function in addition to its role in virulence. The identification of the vacB gene product as RNase R should aid in understanding how the virulence phenotype in enterobacteria is expressed and regulated. On the basis of this information we propose that vacB be renamed rnr.
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PMID:The vacB gene required for virulence in Shigella flexneri and Escherichia coli encodes the exoribonuclease RNase R. 960 4

RNA decay in bacteria is carried out by a number of enzymes that participate in the coordinated degradation of their substrates. Endo- and exonucleolytic cleavages as well as polyadenylation are generally involved in determining the half-life of RNAs. Small, untranslated antisense RNAs are suitable model systems to study decay. A study of the pathway of degradation of CopA, the copy number regulator RNA of plasmid R1, is reported here. Strains carrying mutations in the genes encoding RNase E, polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), RNase II and poly(A) polymerase I (PcnB/PAP I)--alone or in combination--were used to investigate degradation patterns and relative half-lives of CopA. The results obtained suggest that RNase E initiates CopA decay. Both PNPase and RNase II can degrade the major 3'-cleavage product generated by RNase E. This exonucleolytic degradation is aided by PcnB, which may imply a requirement for A-tailing. RNase II can partially protect CopA's 3'-end from PNPase-dependent degradation. Other RNases are probably involved in decay, since in rnb/pnp double mutants, decay still occurs, albeit at a reduced rate. Experiments using purified RNase E identified cleavage sites in CopA in the vicinity of, but not identical to, those mapped in vivo, suggesting that the cleavage site specificity of this RNase is modulated by additional proteins in the cell. A model of CopA decay is presented and discussed.
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PMID:Degradation pathway of CopA, the antisense RNA that controls replication of plasmid R1. 969 24

8-Oxoguanine, an oxidized form of guanine, has the potential to pair with both cytosine and adenine, and thus, the persistence of this base in messenger RNA would cause translational errors. To prevent such an outcome, organisms probably have a mechanism for recognizing RNA molecules carrying 8-oxoguanine and prevent them from entering into the cellular translational machinery. We now report that the Escherichia coli cell possesses proteins that bind specifically to RNA carrying 8-oxoguanine. On incubation with a cell-free extract, 8-oxoguanine-containing RNA is stable while normal RNA is degraded by cellular nucleases. The RNase protection assay and gel shift assay revealed that some proteins bind specifically to 8-oxoguanine-containing RNA, hence preventing nuclease attacks. Among the complexes that were detected, one with a 77 kDa protein exhibits tight binding between RNA and protein components. This protein was identified as polynucleotide phosphorylase, encoded by the pnp gene. pnp(-)() mutants are hyperresistant to paraquat, a drug that induces oxidative stress in the cell. Binding of Pnp protein to 8-oxoguanine-containing RNA would inhibit cell growth, probably due to withdrawal of such RNA from the translational machinery. The Pnp protein may, therefore, discriminate between an oxidized RNA molecule and a normal one, thus contributing a high fidelity of translation.
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PMID:Specific binding of 8-oxoguanine-containing RNA to polynucleotide phosphorylase protein. 1150 94

mRNA instability is an intrinsic property that permits timely changes in gene expression by limiting the lifetime of a transcript. The RNase e of Escherichia coli is a single-strand-specific endo-nuclease involved in the processing of rRNA and the degradation of mRNA. A nucleolytic multi-enzyme complex now known as the RNA degradosome was discovered during the purification and characterization of RNase E. Two other components are a 3' exoribonuclease (polynucleotide phosphorylase, PNPase) and a DEAD-box RNA helicase (RNA helicase B, RhlB). RNase E is a large multidomain protein with N-terminal ribonucleolytic activity, an RNA-binding domain and a C-terminal "scaffold" that binds PNPase, enolase and RhlB. RhlB by itself has little activity but is strongly stimiulated by its interaction with RNase E. RhlB in vitro can facilitate the degradation of structured RNA by PNPase. Since the discovery of the RNA degradosome in E. coli, related complexes have been described in other organisms.
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PMID:The Escherichia coli RNA degradosome: structure, function and relationship in other ribonucleolytic multienzyme complexes. 1203 60

A strain of Bacillus subtilis lacking two 3'-to-5' exoribonucleases, polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) and RNase R, was used to purify another 3'-to-5' exoribonuclease, which is encoded by the yhaM gene. YhaM was active in the presence of Mn(2+) (or Co(2+)), was inactive in the presence of Mg(2+), and could also degrade single-stranded DNA. The half-life of bulk mRNA in a mutant lacking PNPase, RNase R, and YhaM was not significantly different from that of the wild type, suggesting the existence of additional activities that can participate in mRNA turnover. Sequence homologues of YhaM were found only in gram-positive organisms. The Staphylococcus aureus homologue, CBF1, which had been characterized as a double-stranded DNA binding protein involved in plasmid replication, was also shown to be an Mn(2+)-dependent exoribonuclease. YhaM protein has a C-terminal "HD domain," found in metal-dependent phosphohydrolases. By structure modeling, it was shown that YhaM also contains an N-terminal "OB-fold," present in many oligosaccharide- and oligonucleotide-binding proteins. The combination of these two domains is unique. Thus, YhaM and 10 related proteins from gram-positive organisms constitute a new exonuclease family.
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PMID:Bacillus subtilis YhaM, a member of a new family of 3'-to-5' exonucleases in gram-positive bacteria. 1239 95

Previous work has detected an RNase E-like endoribonucleolytic activity in cell extracts obtained from Streptomyces. Here, we identify a Streptomyces coelicolor gene, rns, encoding a 140 kDa protein (RNase ES) that shows endoribonucleolytic cleavage specificity characteristic of RNase E, confers viability on and allows propagation of Escherichia coli cells lacking RNase E and accomplishes RNase E-like regulation of plasmid copy number in E. coli. However, notwithstanding its complementation of rne-deleted E. coli, RNase ES did not accurately process 9S rRNA from E. coli. Additionally, whereas RNase E is normally required for E. coli survival, rns is not an essential gene in S. coelicolor. Deletion analysis mapped the catalytic domain of RNase ES near its centre and showed that regions located near the RNase ES termini interact with an S. coelicolor homologue of polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) - a major component of E. coli RNase E-based degradosomes. The interacting arginine- and proline-rich segments resemble the C-terminally located degradosome scaffold region of E. coli RNase E. Our results indicate that RNase ES is a structurally shuffled RNase E homologue showing evolutionary conservation of functional RNase E-like enzymatic activity, and suggest the existence of degradosome-like complexes in Gram-positive bacteria.
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PMID:A Streptomyces coelicolor functional orthologue of Escherichia coli RNase E shows shuffling of catalytic and PNPase-binding domains. 1267 96

Despite their overall accuracy, errors in macromolecular processes, such as rRNA synthesis and ribosome assembly, inevitably occur. However, whether these errors are remediated and how this might be accomplished is not known. In previous work, we showed that a double mutant strain lacking both polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) and RNase R activities is inviable. In the course of examining the molecular basis for this phenotype, we found that shifting a temperature-sensitive mutant strain to 42 degrees C led to cessation of growth and loss of cell viability. Northern analysis of RNA isolated from such cells after the temperature shift revealed that fragments of 16S and 23S rRNA accumulated to a high level, and that the amount of ribosomes and ribosomal subunits decreased due to defects in ribosome assembly. rRNA fragments were not detected at 31 degrees C or when single mutant strains were grown at 42 degrees C. Pulse-chase analysis showed that the rRNA fragments appeared within 5 min at 42 degrees C, and that they accumulated before the loss of cell viability. The data are consistent with a model in which PNPase and RNase R mediate a previously unknown quality control process that normally removes defective rRNAs as soon as they are generated. In the absence of these RNases, rRNA fragments accumulate, leading to interference with ribosome maturation and ultimately to cell death.
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PMID:Quality control of ribosomal RNA mediated by polynucleotide phosphorylase and RNase R. 1274 60

In this paper we show that RNase R is a cold shock protein that is induced seven- to eightfold by cold shock and that its expression is tightly regulated by temperature. Transcriptional studies reveal that the rnr gene is co-transcribed with flanking genes as an operon induced under cold shock. The induction of RNase R levels is mainly a result of the stabilization of the rnr transcripts. The transient stability of the rnr transcripts is shown to be regulated by PNPase at the end of the acclimation phase. Studies with an rnr mutant revealed a cold-shock phenotype showing that RNase R contributes to growth at low temperatures. We have shown that RNase R can be involved in the maturation of SsrA/tmRNA, an important small stable RNA involved in protein tagging and ribosome rescue. The wide biological significance of RNase R regarding adaptation to cold shock and its involvement in RNA surveillance, protein quality control and pathogenesis is discussed.
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PMID:Cold shock induction of RNase R and its role in the maturation of the quality control mediator SsrA/tmRNA. 1462 21

In a continuing effort to identify ribonucleases that may be involved in mRNA decay in Bacillus subtilis, fractionation of a protein extract from a triple-mutant strain that was missing three previously characterized 3'-to-5' exoribonucleases (polynucleotide phosphorylase [PNPase], RNase R, and YhaM) was undertaken. These experiments revealed the presence of a high-molecular-weight nuclease encoded by the yhcR gene that was active in the presence of Ca(2+) and Mn(2+). YhcR is a sugar-nonspecific nuclease that cleaves endonucleolytically to yield nucleotide 3'-monophosphate products, similar to the well-characterized micrococcal nuclease of Staphylococcus aureus. YhcR appears to be located principally in the cell wall and is likely to be a substrate for a B. subtilis sortase. Zymogram analysis suggests that YhcR is the major Ca(2+)-activated nuclease of B. subtilis. In addition to having a unique overall domain structure, YhcR contains a hitherto unknown structural domain that we have named "NYD," for "new YhcR domain."
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PMID:Bacillus subtilis YhcR, a high-molecular-weight, nonspecific endonuclease with a unique domain structure. 1529 38

Both low temperatures and encounters with host phagocytes are two stresses that have been relatively well studied in many species of bacteria. Previous work has shown that the exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) is required for Yersiniae to grow at low temperatures. Here, we show that PNPase also enhances the ability of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia pestis to withstand the killing activities of murine macrophages. PNPase is required for the optimal functioning of the Yersinia type three secretion system (TTSS), an organelle that injects effector proteins directly into host cells. Unexpectedly, the effect of PNPase on the TTSS is independent of its ribonuclease activity and instead requires its S1 RNA binding domain. In contrast, catalytically inactive enzyme does not enhance the low temperature growth effect of PNPase. Surprisingly, wild-type-like TTSS functioning was restored to the pnp mutant strain by expressing just the approximately 70 amino acid S1 domains from either PNPase, RNase R, RNase II, or RpsA. Our findings suggest that PNPase plays multifaceted roles in enhancing Yersinia survival in response to stressful conditions.
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PMID:Modulation of yersinia type three secretion system by the S1 domain of polynucleotide phosphorylase. 1550 83


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