The bacterial toxin RelE induces specific mRNA cleavage in the A site of the eukaryote ribosome

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Abstract

RelE/RelB is a well-characterized toxin-anti-toxin pair involved in nutritional stress responses in Bacteria and Archae. RelE lacks any eukaryote homolog, but we demonstrate here that it efficiently and specifically cleaves mRNA in the A site of the eukaryote ribosome. The cleavage mechanism is similar to that in bacteria, showing the feasibility of A-site cleavage of mRNA for regulatory purposes also in eukaryotes. RelE cleavage in the A-site codon of a stalled eukaryote ribosome is precise and easily monitored, making "RelE printing" a useful complement to toeprinting to determine the exact mRNA location on the eukaryote ribosome and to probe the occupancy of its A site. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2008 RNA Society.

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Andreev, D., Hauryliuk, V., Terenin, I., Dmitriev, S., Ehrenberg, M., & Shatsky, I. (2008). The bacterial toxin RelE induces specific mRNA cleavage in the A site of the eukaryote ribosome. RNA, 14(2), 233–239. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.693208

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