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Transcriptome-scale analysis uncovers conserved residues in the hydrophobic core of the bacterial RNA chaperone Hfq required for small regulatory RNA stability

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

The RNA chaperone Hfq plays crucial roles in bacterial gene expression and is a major facilitator of small regulatory RNA (sRNA) action. The toroidal architecture of the Hfq hexamer presents three well-characterized surfaces that allow it to bind sRNAs to stabilize them and engage target transcripts. Hfq-interacting sRNAs are categorized into two classes based on the surfaces they use to bind Hfq. By characterizing a systematic alanine mutant library of Hfq to identify amino acid residues that impact survival of Escherichia coli experiencing nitrogen (N) starvation, we corroborated the important role of the three RNA-binding surfaces for Hfq function. We uncovered two, previously uncharacterized, conserved residues, V22 and G34, in the hydrophobic core of Hfq, to have a profound impact on Hfq’s RNA-binding activity in vivo. Transcriptome-scale analysis revealed that V22A and G34A Hfq mutants cause widespread destabilization of both sRNA classes, to the same extent as seen in bacteria devoid of Hfq. However, the alanine substitutions at these residues resulted in only modest alteration in stability and structure of Hfq. We propose that V22 and G34 have impact on Hfq function, especially critical under cellular conditions when there is an increased demand for Hfq, such as N starvation.

Description

Funder: Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research, University Hospital of Würzburg; doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100009379


Funder: Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds; doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001645

Keywords

Journal Title

Nucleic Acids Research

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Journal ISSN

0305-1048
1362-4962

Volume Title

53

Publisher

Oxford University Press

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
BBSRC (BB/V000284/1)
Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2020-050)
Czech Science Foundation (23-05639S)
Wellcome Trust (222451/Z/21/Z)