Abstract

Adaptation to extracytoplasmic stress in Escherichia coli depends on the activation of sigmaE, normally sequestered by the membrane protein RseA. SigmaE is released in response to stress through the successive RseA cleavage by DegS and the RIP protease RseP. SigmaE and proteases that free it from RseA are essential. We isolated a multicopy suppressor that alleviated RseP and DegS requirement. The suppressor encodes a novel small RNA, RseX. Its activity required the RNA-binding protein Hfq. We used the property that small RNAs are often involved in RNA-RNA interactions to capture RseX putative partners; ompA and ompC mRNA, which encode two major outer membrane proteins, were identified. RseX activity was shown to confer an Hfq-dependent coordinate OmpA and OmpC down-regulation. Because RseP is shown to be no longer essential in a strain lacking OmpA and OmpC, we conclude that RseP, which is required for normal sigmaE activation, prevents toxicity due to the presence of two specific outer membrane proteins that are down-regulated by RseX.

Highlights

  • Regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP)2 refers to a biochemical activity by which membrane-bound proteins are cleaved to release factors into the bacterial cytoplasm or into the eukaryotic cytosol (19 –21)

  • Our experiment suggested that the ompA and ompC mRNAs are likely to interact directly with RseX and that by affecting the amount of OmpA and OmpC, RseX would bypass the need for RseP

  • We demonstrated that it expresses RseX, an sRNA of 91 nucleotides

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Summary

Introduction

Regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP)2 refers to a biochemical activity by which membrane-bound proteins are cleaved to release factors into the bacterial cytoplasm or into the eukaryotic cytosol (19 –21). The suppression mechanism requires the RNA-binding protein Hfq. Using RseX as bait, two of its targets, ompA and ompC mRNA were captured. RseX overproduction results in reduced amounts of ompA and ompC mRNA and corresponding outer membrane proteins.

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