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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

Computational identification of noncoding RNAs in E. coli by comparative genomics.

TL;DR: A computational comparative genomic screen for ncRNA genes is described, to distinguish conserved RNA secondary structures from a background of other conserved sequences using probabilistic models of expected mutational patterns in pairwise sequence alignments.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This work presents a simplified approach for global promoter identification in bacteria using RNA-seq-based transcriptomic analyses of 22 distinct infection-relevant environmental conditions and presents a small RNA expression landscape of 280 sRNAs.
Book ChapterDOI

Small RNAs in bacteria and archaea: who they are, what they do, and how they do it

TL;DR: Based on the properties that distinguish sRNA-type from transcription factors-type control, the authors begin to glimpse why sRNAs have evolved as a second, essential layer of gene regulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative genomics reveals 104 candidate structured RNAs from bacteria, archaea, and their metagenomes

TL;DR: This work greatly expands the variety of highly structured noncoding RNAs known to exist in bacteria and archaea and provides a starting point for biochemical and genetic studies needed to validate their biologic functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

An insider's perspective: Bacteroides as a window into the microbiome

TL;DR: How over a century of study of the readily cultured, genetically tractable human gut Bacteroides has revealed important insights into the biochemistry, genomics and ecology that make a gut bacterium a Gut bacterium is discussed.
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