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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Comparative genomics provides structural and functional insights into Bacteroides RNA biology

TLDR
In this paper, a comparative genomics approach was used to investigate RNA biology in an understudied gut bacterium, using Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron as a representative microbiota member.
Abstract
Bacteria employ noncoding RNA molecules for a wide range of biological processes, including scaffolding large molecular complexes, catalyzing chemical reactions, defending against phages, and controlling gene expression. Secondary structures, binding partners, and molecular mechanisms have been determined for numerous small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs) in model aerobic bacteria. However, technical hurdles have largely prevented analogous analyses in the anaerobic gut microbiota. While experimental techniques are being developed to investigate the sRNAs of gut commensals, computational tools and comparative genomics can provide immediate functional insight. Here, using Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron as a representative microbiota member, we illustrate how comparative genomics improves our understanding of RNA biology in an understudied gut bacterium. We investigate putative RNA-binding proteins and predict a Bacteroides cold-shock protein homolog to have an RNA-related function. We apply an in silico protocol incorporating both sequence and structural analysis to determine the consensus structures and conservation of nine Bacteroides noncoding RNA families. Using structure probing, we validate and refine these predictions and deposit them in the Rfam database. Through synteny analyses, we illustrate how genomic coconservation can serve as a predictor of sRNA function. Altogether, this work showcases the power of RNA informatics for investigating the RNA biology of anaerobic microbiota members.

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Posted ContentDOI

An integrated transcriptomics–functional genomics approach reveals a small RNA that modulates Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron sensitivity to tetracyclines

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors map transcriptional units and profile their expression levels in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron over a suite of 15 defined experimental conditions that are relevant in vivo, such as variation of temperature, pH, and oxygen tension, exposure to antibiotic stress, and growth on simple carbohydrates or on host mucin derived glycans.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The E. coli RhlE RNA helicase regulates the function of related RNA helicases during ribosome assembly.

TL;DR: It is proposed that RhlE is a novel ribosome assembly factor, which plays a role in the interconversion of ribosomal RNA-folding intermediates that are further processed by DeaD or SrmB during ribosomes maturation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Important role of the tetraloop region of 4.5S RNA in SRP binding to its receptor FtsY.

TL;DR: It is suggested that both SRP RNA and Ffh undergo mutual structural adaptation to form SRP that is functional in the interaction with the receptor, FtsY, and this work reports that the exchange of the GGAA tetraloop sequence in domain IV of 4.5S RNA for UUCG abolishes SRP-FtsY interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

SRP RNA provides the physiologically essential GTPase activation function in cotranslational protein targeting

TL;DR: It is shown that SRP RNA enhances GTPase activity of the SRP-receptor complex above a critical threshold required for cell viability, which explains why no external GAP is needed and why the phylogenetically conservedSRP RNA tetraloop is required in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

6S RNA, a Global Regulator of Transcription

TL;DR: Much has been learned about this unusual RNA, its mechanism of action, and how it is regulated; yet much still remains to be investigated, especially regarding potential differences in behavior of 6S RNAs in diverse bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

An unusual primary sigma factor in the Bacteroidetes phylum.

TL;DR: The single rpoD‐like gene observed in the B. fragilis genome, and similarly in those of other members of the Bacteroidetes phylum, was found to be essential and encodes a protein, σABfr, that is produced with equal abundance during all phases of growth and was concluded to be the primary sigma factor.
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