Functional significance of an evolutionarily conserved Alanine (GCA) resume codon in tmRNA in Escherichia coli

Kapoor, Suman ; Samhita, Laasya ; Varshney, Umesh (2011) Functional significance of an evolutionarily conserved Alanine (GCA) resume codon in tmRNA in Escherichia coli Journal of Bacteriology, 193 (14). pp. 3569-3576. ISSN 0021-9193

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Official URL: http://jb.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/193/14/3569

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.01446-10

Abstract

Occasionally, ribosomes stall on mRNAs prior to the completion of the polypeptide chain. In Escherichia coli and other eubacteria, tmRNA-mediated trans-translation is a major mechanism that recycles the stalled ribosomes. The tmRNA possesses a tRNA-like domain and a short mRNA region encoding a short peptide (ANDENYALAA in E. coli) followed by a termination codon. The first amino acid (Ala) of this peptide encoded by the resume codon (GCN) is highly conserved in tmRNAs in different species. However, reasons for the high evolutionary conservation of the resume codon identity have remained unclear. In this study, we show that changing the E. coli tmRNA resume codon to other efficiently translatable codons retains efficient functioning of the tmRNA. However, when the resume codon was replaced with the low-usage codons, its function was adversely affected. Interestingly, expression of tRNAs decoding the low-usage codon from plasmid-borne gene copies restored efficient utilization of tmRNA. We discuss why in E. coli, the GCA (Ala) is one of the best codons and why all codons in the short mRNA of the tmRNA are decoded by the abundant tRNAs.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Society for Microbiology.
ID Code:56262
Deposited On:23 Aug 2011 11:59
Last Modified:23 Aug 2011 11:59

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