A 5′-terminal stem-loop structure can stabilize mRNA in Escnerichia coli

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Abstract

The 5′-untranslated region of the long-lived Escherichia coli ompA transcript functions as an mRNA stabilizer capable of prolonging the lifetime in E. coli of a number of heterologous messages to which it is fused. To elucidate the structural basis of differential mRNA stability in bacteria, the domains of the ompA 5′-untranslated region that allow it to protect mRNA from degradation have been identified by mutational analysis. The presence of a stem-loop no more than 2-4 nucleotides from the extreme 5′ terminus of this RNA segment is crucial to its stabilizing influence, whereas the sequence of the stem-loop is relatively unimportant. The potential to form a hairpin very close to the 5′ end is a feature common to a number of stable prokaryotic messages. Moreover, the lifetime of a normally labile message (bla mRNA) can be prolonged in E. coli by adding a simple hairpin structure at its 5′ terminus. Accelerated degradation of ompA mRNA in the absence of a 5′-terminal stem-loop appears to start downstream of the 5′ end. We propose that E. coli messages beginning with a single-stranded RNA segment of significant length are preferentially targeted by a degradative ribonuclease that interacts with the mRNA 5′ terminus before cleaving internally at one or more distal sites.

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Emory, S. A., Bouvet, P., & Belasco, J. G. (1992). A 5′-terminal stem-loop structure can stabilize mRNA in Escnerichia coli. Genes and Development, 6(1), 135–148. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.6.1.135

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