Abstract

BackgroundExcept for the ribosomal protein L12 (rplL), ribosomal proteins are present as one copy per ribosome; L12 (rplL) is unusual because it is present as four copies per ribosome. Thus, the strategies used by Mycobacterium fortuitum to regulate ribosomal protein synthesis were investigated, including evaluations of the rates of chain elongations of 16S rRNA, rplL and ribosomal protein S12 (rpsL).MethodologyRNA was isolated from cell cultures and cDNA was prepared. The numbers of cDNA copies of 16S rRNA, precursor-16S rRNA and transcripts of rpsL and rplL were quantified by qRT-PCR and then related to the rates of 16S rRNA, rpsL and rplL chain elongations by means of a mathematical framework for coupled transcription/translation.Principal FindingsThe rates of synthesis of 16S rRNA, rpsL and rplL respectively were found to be approximately 50×103 nucleotides h−1, 1.6×103 amino acid residues h−1 and 3.4×103 amino acid residues h−1. The number of transcripts of rplL was approximately twice that of rpsL. These data account for the presence of one copy of rpsL and four copies of rplL per ribosome, and reveal that the rate of M. fortuitum ribosome synthesis was closer to that of M. tuberculosis than to E. coli. Except for rplJ, the elongation rate obtained for rpsL was inferred to be appropriate for all other proteins present as one copy per ribosome.SignificanceThe results obtained provide the basis for a comprehensive view of the kinetics of ribosome synthesis, and of the ways that bacterial cells utilize genes encoding ribosomal proteins. The methodology also applies to proteins involved in transcription, energy generation and to bacterial proteins in general. The method proposed for measuring the fidelity of cDNA preparations is intrinsically much more sensitive than procedures that measure the integrity of 16S rRNA.

Highlights

  • Mycobacteria are a group of bacilli that can be isolated from a wide range of environmental conditions [1]

  • The aim of our study was the analysis of the mycobacterial ribosome synthesis through the transcriptional study of three ribosomal components, namely, 16S rRNA and two ribosomal proteins rpsL (S12) and rplL (L7/L12)

  • We investigated the rates of synthesis of three components of ribosomes during exponential growth of M fortuitum; namely, 16S rRNA and two ribosomal proteins rpsL (S12) and rplL (L7/L12)

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Summary

Introduction

Mycobacteria are a group of bacilli that can be isolated from a wide range of environmental conditions [1]. The genus has been subdivided into two groups according to the time required to visualize colonies in solid media (more or less than seven days). The opportunistic pathogen, Mycobacterium fortuitum belongs to the group of rapidly growing mycobacteria (those mycobacteria that develop colonies in less than seven days). Members of this group usually have two copies of the rrn operon per genome [3]. The strategies used by Mycobacterium fortuitum to regulate ribosomal protein synthesis were investigated, including evaluations of the rates of chain elongations of 16S rRNA, rplL and ribosomal protein S12 (rpsL)

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