The Bacillus subtilis tyrZ gene encodes a highly selective tyrosyl tRNA synthetase and is regulated by a MarR regulator and T box riboswitch

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Abstract

Misincorporation of D-tyrosine (D-Tyr) into cellular proteins due to mischarging of tRNA Tyr with D-Tyr by tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase inhibits growth and biofilm formation of Bacillus subtilis. Furthermore, many B. subtilis strains lack a functional gene encoding D-aminoacyl-tRNA deacylase, which prevents misincorporation of D-Tyr in most organisms. B. subtilis has two genes that encode tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase: tyrS is expressed under normal growth conditions, and tyrZ is known to be expressed only when tyrS is inactivated by mutation. We hypothesized that tyrZ encodes an alternate tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, expression of which allows the cell to grow when D-Tyr is present. We show that TyrZ is more selective for L-Tyr over D-Tyr than is TyrS; however, TyrZ is less efficient overall. We also show that expression of tyrZ is required for growth and biofilm formation in the presence of D-Tyr. Both tyrS and tyrZ are preceded by a T box riboswitch, but tyrZ is found in an operon with ywaE, which is predicted to encode a MarR family transcriptional regulator. Expression of tyrZ is repressed by YwaE and also is regulated at the level of transcription attenuation by the T box riboswitch. We conclude that expression of tyrZ may allow growth when excess D-Tyr is present.

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Williams-Wagner, R. N., Grundy, F. J., Raina, M., Ibba, M., & Henkin, T. M. (2015). The Bacillus subtilis tyrZ gene encodes a highly selective tyrosyl tRNA synthetase and is regulated by a MarR regulator and T box riboswitch. Journal of Bacteriology, 197(9), 1624–1631. https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00008-15

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