Post-translational modification of RNase R is regulated by stress-dependent reduction in the acetylating enzyme Pka (YfiQ)

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Abstract

RNase R is a processive exoribonuclease that plays an important role in degradation of structured RNAs in Escherichia coli. RNase R is unstable in exponential phase cells; however, under certain stress conditions, RNase R levels increase dramatically due to its stabilization. Binding of tmRNA and SmpB to the C-terminal region of RNase R is required for its instability, and this binding is regulated by acetylation of a single residue, Lys544, in exponential phase cells. RNase R is not acetylated in stationary phase. We show here that only exponential phase RNase R is acetylated because the modifying enzyme, protein lysine acetyltransferase, Pka (YfiQ), is absent from late exponential and stationary phase cells. As a consequence, newly synthesized RNase R remains unmodified. Together with the turnover of preexisting acetylated RNase R, no modified RNase R remains in stationary phase. We find that RNase R in cold-shocked cells also lacks the acetyl modification due to the absence of Pka. These data indicate that RNase R stability depends on Pka, which itself is regulated under stress conditions. Copyright © 2012 RNA Society.

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Liang, W., & Deutscher, M. P. (2012). Post-translational modification of RNase R is regulated by stress-dependent reduction in the acetylating enzyme Pka (YfiQ). RNA, 18(1), 37–41. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.030213.111

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