4.8 Article

Early termination of the Shiga toxin transcript generates a regulatory small RNA

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2006730117

关键词

sRNA; lambda phage; Shiga toxin; ncRNA; noncoding RNA

资金

  1. Research Training Program Scholarship from the Australian Government
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council [GNT1161161]
  3. Research Infrastructure Programme of UNSW Sydney

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Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli is a significant human pathogen that causes disease ranging from hemorrhagic colitis to hemolytic uremic syndrome. The latter can lead to potentially fatal renal failure and is caused by the release of Shiga toxins that are encoded within lambdoid bacteriophages. The toxins are encoded within the late transcript of the phage and are regulated by anti-termination of the P-R' late promoter during lytic induction of the phage. During lysogeny, the late transcript is prematurely terminated at t(R)' immediately downstream of P-R', generating a short RNA that is a byproduct of antitermination regulation. We demonstrate that this short transcript binds the small RNA chaperone Hfq, and is processed into a stable 74-nt regulatory small RNA that we have termed StxS. StxS represses expression of Shiga toxin 1 under lysogenic conditions through direct interactions with the stx1AB transcript. StxS acts in trans to activate expression of the general stress response sigma factor, RpoS, through direct interactions with an activating seed sequence within the 5 ' UTR. Activation of RpoS promotes high cell density growth under nutrient-limiting conditions. Many phages utilize antitermination to regulate the lytic/lysogenic switch and our results demonstrate that short RNAs generated as a byproduct of this regulation can acquire regulatory small RNA functions that modulate host fitness.

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