Superoxide dismutases (SODs) are widely distributed enzymes that convert superoxides to hydrogen peroxide and molecular oxygen, using various metals as cofactors. Many actinobacteria contain genes for both Ni-containing (sodN) and Fe-containing (sodF) SODs. In Streptomyces coelicolor, expression of the sodF and sodN genes is inversely regulated by nickel-specific Nur, a Fur-family regulator. With sufficient nickel, Nur directly represses sodF transcription, while inducing sodN indirectly. Bioinformatic search revealed that a conserved 19-nt stretch upstream of sodN matches perfectly with the sodF downstream sequence. We found that the sodF gene produced a stable small-sized RNA species (s-SodF) of ∼90 nt that harbors the anti-sodN sequence complementary to sodN mRNA from the 5′-end up to the ribosome binding site. Absence of nearby promoters and sensitivity to 5′-phosphate-specific exonuclease indicated that the s-SodF RNA is a likely processed product of sodF mRNA. The s-SodF RNA caused a significant decrease in the half-life of the sodN mRNA. Therefore, Nur activates sodN expression through inhibiting the synthesis of sodF mRNA, from which inhibitory s-SodF RNA is generated. This reveals a novel mechanism by which antagonistic regulation of one gene is achieved by small RNA processed from the 3′UTR of another gene's mRNA. © 2013 The Author(s) 2013. Published by Oxford University Press.
CITATION STYLE
Kim, H. M., Shin, J. H., Cho, Y. B., & Roe, J. H. (2014). Inverse regulation of Fe-And Ni-containing SOD genes by a fur family regulator Nur through small RNA processed from 3′UTR of the sodF mRNA. Nucleic Acids Research, 42(3), 2003–2014. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt1071
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