Defining a minimal cell: essentiality of small ORF s and nc RNA s in a genome‐reduced bacterium

  • Lluch‐Senar M
  • Delgado J
  • Chen W
  • et al.
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Abstract

Identifying all essential genomic components is critical for the assembly of minimal artificial life. In the genome-reduced bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae, we found that small ORFs (smORFs; < 100 residues), accounting for 10% of all ORFs, are the most frequently essential genomic components (53%), followed by conventional ORFs (49%). Essentiality of smORFs may be explained by their function as members of protein and/or DNA/RNA complexes. In larger proteins, essentiality applied to individual domains and not entire proteins, a notion we could confirm by expression of truncated domains. The fraction of essential non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) non-overlapping with essential genes is 5% higher than of non-transcribed regions (0.9%), pointing to the important functions of the former. We found that the minimal essential genome is comprised of 33% (269,410 bp) of the M. pneumoniae genome. Our data highlight an unexpected hidden layer of smORFs with essential functions, as well as non-coding regions, thus changing the focus when aiming to define the minimal essential genome.

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Lluch‐Senar, M., Delgado, J., Chen, W., Lloréns‐Rico, V., O’Reilly, F. J., Wodke, J. A., … Serrano, L. (2015). Defining a minimal cell: essentiality of small ORF s and nc RNA s in a genome‐reduced bacterium. Molecular Systems Biology, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20145558

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