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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2003, p. 7273-7278, Vol. 185, No. 24
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.24.7273-7278.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Genetics,1 Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-51202
Received 30 July 2003/ Accepted 17 September 2003
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Polyadenylation at the 3' ends of RNA molecules is a posttranscriptional process that occurs in all three phylogenetic domains and has been shown to prominently affect a number of cellular processes, including RNA transport, translation, splicing, and RNA stability (for reviews, see references 8 and 39). Polyadenylation affects RNA stability in vivo (12, 14, 31, 46), in part by accelerating transcript digestion by 3'-5' exoribonucleases (40, 45). In Escherichia coli, polyadenylation is carried out principally by poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I; EC 2.7.7.19), which can add poly(A) in vivo to both primary transcripts (4, 12, 14, 31, 45, 46) and their decay intermediates (4, 28, 45). PAP I is a member of the nucleotidyltransferase (NTF) superfamily, which also includes tRNA NTF (EC 2.7.7.25), also known as CCA-adding enzyme (15, 48). Different members of the NTF superfamily have distinctly different biochemical actions despite very considerable sequence homology; thus, it has not been practical to infer the enzyme action of NTF superfamily members from their structural features (48). NTF superfamily members classified as tRNA NTFs specifically add or repair CCA triplets at the 3' ends of tRNAs (7), whereas family members designated as PAPs can add continuous stretches of principally adenosines to the 3' ends of almost any RNA (4, 28). Determination of the specific function of the individual members of the NTF superfamily must therefore be dependent on analysis of the enzymatic activities. It is noteworthy that E. coli PAP I can use all four nucleoside triphosphates for making long homoribopolymers in vitro and also shows high binding activity to poly(U), poly(A), and poly(C) [but not poly(G)] (47). This lack of preference for adenosines is also seen in vivo when the enzyme is overexpressed beyond its usually tightly regulated steady-state level (28). Neither the gene for PAP I nor tRNA NTF is an essential gene in E. coli (26, 49).
While the genomes of certain microorganisms, including Bacillus subtilis and Synechocystis strain PCC6803, do not encode a PAP of the NTF family (34, 37), they nevertheless contain polyadenylated RNAs (10, 37, 38). Polyadenylation also occurs in PAP I mutant strains of E. coli (20, 30), and in this case it is mediated, at least in part, by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase; EC 2.7.7.8) (29). This protein, which was originally discovered by its ability to catalyze the formation of polyribonucleotides and later shown to function in vivo largely as a 3'-5' phosphorylytic exoribonuclease (11), more recently was shown to have functional overlap in E. coli with tRNA NTF and PAP I (29, 36). Interestingly, PNPase-like proteins can not only remove poly(A) tails both in vivo and in vitro (37, 44, 45) but also add poly(A) tails in vivo to mRNA in E. coli (29), Synechocystis strain PCC6803 (37), and plants (23).
Streptomyces
species are GC rich (
72%) gram-positive bacteria that
exhibit a morphologically and physiologically complex development
(5). These soil-living
bacteria produce a variety of antibiotics and other medically and
agriculturally important secondary metabolites. The genome of
Streptomyces coelicolor recently has been sequenced and
annotated (1),
facilitating use of this species as a model organism for global
analysis of altered gene expression during Streptomyces
development (17). S.
coelicolor transcripts have been shown to undergo polyadenylation
in vivo (2,
3; B. Sohlberg J. Huang,
and S. Cohen, unpublished observations), and global analysis of S.
coelicolor transcripts at single-gene resolution indicates that
mRNA polyadenylation in S. coelicolor is widespread among
individual mRNAs (J. Huang, J. Shi, B. Sohlberg, and S. N.
Cohen, unpublished data). During our investigations of RNA
polyadenylation in S. coelicolor, we discovered that a PAP
I-like locus identified in the S. coelicolor genome by
sequence analysis and hypothesized to be a mediator of polyadenylation
(3) instead functions as
an NTF that adds CCA termini to the 3' ends of tRNA but lacks
detectable ability to polyadenylate RNA. Here we report these findings
and additionally show that the S. coelicolor PNPase homologue
can act as a PAP and is likely to be a principal producer of poly(A)
tails in this organism, as has been speculated from the heterogeneous
nature of these tails
(2).
The genes for the putative NTF and Streptomyces pnp were amplified by PCR of genomic DNA from S. coelicolor A3(2) M145 and the following primer pairs: 5'SCNTF (5'-GAA ATT AAT ACG ACT CAC TAT AGG GTT AAC TTT AAC TTT AAG AAG GAG ATA TAC ATA TGC CGA ACG CCA ACG AAG TC-3') and 3'SCNTF (5'-CCG AAT TCA GTG GTG GTGGTG GTG GTG GTG GTG TGC GTT GTC CGG GTG CTG AGC-3'); and 5'SA/SCPNP (5'-CCG GAA TTC CAT ATG GAG AAC GAG AAC CAC-3') and 3'SCPNP (5'-TCA GGA TCC TCA GTG GTG GTG GTG GTG GTG GTG GTG CTT GTC GGC GTC GTC-3'). The products were digested with restriction enzymes and ligated into expression vectors digested with the same enzymes. The NTF gene was inserted into pET21a (Novagen) and pIJ6021, kindly provided by Mervyn Bibb (John Innes Centre, Norwich, United Kingdom) (42), whereas the pnp gene was inserted into pET11a (Novagen). E. coli pnp was amplified from E. coli genomic DNA using the primers ECPNPFWD (5'-NNA GAT CTN NCA TAT GCG CAG AAG ATC GGG T-3') and ECPNPREV (5'-AGG ATC CTC AGT GGT GGT GGT GGT GGT GGT GGT GCT CGC CCT GTT CAG CAG CCG G-3'). The gene was then inserted into pET11a. The strain and construct expressing E. coli PAP I (9) was kindly provided by Yanan Feng (Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.). The E. coli vectors were introduced by transformation into BL21(DE3)/pLysS, and the protein expression was induced by 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside. Streptomyces lividans TK21 (16) was used as host for the pIJ6021-SCNTF construct, and protein production was induced by thiostrepton as described previously (42). All His-tagged proteins were purified according to the HisBind purification manual (Novagen), except that the matrix used was Ni-NTA agarose from Qiagen. The plasmid pJSE371, containing the gene for the PNPase-like protein (GPSI) from Streptomyces antibioticus (19), was a kind gift from George H. Jones (Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.). The S. antibioticus pnp/gpsI gene from pJSE371 was cloned into pGEX-6P-1 (Amersham Pharmacia), and the resulting vector was used for production of glutathione S-transferase (GST)-tagged S. antibioticus PNPase-like protein in the PNPase-deficient E. coli strain CAN244 (PNP-) (35) according to the GST manual from Amersham Pharmacia.
GGG-RNA I transcripts
(9) were internally
labeled with [
-32P]CTP (NEN) using the
MEGA T7short script kit from Ambion. The transcripts were purified by
denaturing polyacrylamide gels. Native tRNA was purchased from
Boehringer and used without further purification. The multiple bands
seen in Fig. 2B reflect
the heterogeneity of the tRNA preparation ("X"
indicates an unknown species in the tRNA preparation that can be
labeled with ATP by the NTF). The template for supF
tRNAtyr was amplified from pJA11 and transcribed as
previously described (9).
For polyadenylation assays, labeled RNA I was incubated with the
purified proteins in a reaction mixture containing 250 mM NaCl, 10 mM
MgCl2, 2 mM K2HPO4, 1 mM
dithiothreitol, 1 mM phosphoenolpyruvate, 0.6 U of pyruvate kinase
(Sigma), and 10 U of RNase inhibitor (Promega) at 37°C for the
indicated times. The reaction was stopped by adding proteinase K buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.9], 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM NaCl, 0.2%
sodium dodecyl sulfate) and 50 µg of proteinase K (Invitrogen)
per sample. The samples were incubated at 30°C for 10 min and
extracted with phenol, and then the RNA was precipitated by
ethanol-sodium acetate and left at -20°C
for 30 min before centrifugation and drying. The dried samples were
redissolved in formamide dye mix, denatured, and separated on 8%
polyacrylamide gels containing 8.3 M urea. Polyadenylation assays with
PNPase and the PNPase-like proteins were performed in a reaction
mixture containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 5 mM MgCl2, 50
mM NaCl, 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5 mM ADP, and 0.5 µg of yeast
tRNA per µl. CCA end repair assays were performed by incubating
unlabeled tRNA with purified proteins in a reaction buffer (50 mM
glycine-NaOH [pH 9.4], 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM
ATP [or 0.5 mM CTP]) with either
[
-32P]ATP or
[
-32P]CTP (for tracing) at 37°C
for 15 min. The samples were extracted with phenol, precipitated with
ethanol, dried, and redissolved in formamide dye mix. The samples were
then denatured and run on denaturing polyacrylamide gels containing 8.3
M urea.
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FIG. 2. Polyadenylation
and CCA repair assays with S. coelicolor NTF. (A) In
vitro-transcribed and labeled GGG-RNA I was incubated with His-tagged
PAP from E. coli (ECPAP), bovine serum albumin (BSA), or
His-tagged NTF from S. coelicolor (SCNTF) for the indicated
times. (B) CCA repair assay with native tRNA. Native,
purified tRNA was incubated with His-tagged S. coelicolor NTF.
The left part of the gel indicates that the reaction mixture contained
ATP with trace amounts of [ -32P]ATP,
whereas the right part of the gel shows the result when the reaction
mixture contained CTP with trace amounts of
[ -32P]CTP. Lanes: 0, no protein added;
BSA, BSA added; 1, SCNTF from E. coli; 2 and 3, SCNTF
overexpressed and purified from S. lividans; 4, PAP from
E. coli. X, unknown species. (C) CCA repair assay
with in vitro-transcribed tRNA. Lanes: 0, no protein added; ECPAP, PAP
from E. coli added; BSA, BSA added; 1 and 2, SCNTF from E.
coli; 3 and 4, SCNTF from S.
lividans.
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FIG. 1. Schematic
structure and sequence comparison of members of the NTF family and the
PNPase family. (A) The sequences from E. coli PAP I
(ECPAP), E. coli CCA-adding enzyme (ECCCA), S.
coelicolor A3(2) NTF (SCNTF), B. subtilis CCA-adding
enzyme (BSCCA), and M. tuberculosis NTF (MTNTF) were selected
for comparison and analyzed using the Conserved Domain Architecture
Retrieval Tool (CDART) on the National Center for Biotechnology
Information server (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). The shaded segments
indicate the conserved regions in each protein. PAP is a domain common
among PAPs (pfam01743), whereas MEP is a common feature of metal
dependent phosphohydrolases (smart00471). Sequence relationships are
also presented as a dendrogram. (B) The sequences from C.
coli PNPase (ECPNP), S. antibioticus PNPase-like protein
(SAPNP), S. coelicolor A3(2) PNPase-like protein (SCPNP),
B. subtilis PNPase (BSPNP), and M. tuberculosis
PNPase-like protein (MTPNP) were selected and analyzed as described for
panel
A.
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The Streptomyces
protein encoded by gene SCO3896 does not have polyadenylation activity
but instead adds CCA to tRNA.
GGG-RNA I, a small antisense RNA that
is known to be polyadenylated by purified E. coli PAP I
(9), showed a
time-dependent conversion of substrate to slower migrating bands,
characteristic of polyadenylation, when treated with this enzyme in the
presence of ATP (Fig.
2A). In contrast, no detectable polyadenylation of GGG-RNA I by SCNTF was
observed under the same conditions. In agreement with the previous
finding that unpaired terminal nucleotides on RNA enable
polyadenylation of this substrate by PAP I
(9,
45), incubation of the
SCNTF protein with a collection of native tRNAs in the presence of
[
-32P]ATP (Fig.
2B) resulted in the
incorporation of this labeled nucleotide, while attachment of
[
-32P]CTP to the substrate by PAP I was
barely detectable. This finding is consistent with earlier evidence
that PAP I incorporates C's less efficiently than A's into
tails. On the other hand, incubation of SCNTF with the tRNA resulted in
the addition of either ATP or CTP to the tRNA, indicating that the
Streptomyces NTF homologue is a CCA-adding enzyme rather than
a PAP. Similar results were observed when synthetic supF
tRNAtyr was used as the substrate: as shown in Fig.
2C, E. coli PAP I
generated long poly(A) additions on the tRNA whereas
Streptomyces SCNTF was able to add only 1 to 3 nucleotides to
the 3' end. Thus, the activities of NTF were the same for the
two sources of tRNA and not dependent on whether it had been
overexpressed and purified from E. coli or S.
lividans.
Streptomyces PNPase-like protein can polyadenylate RNA in vitro. We considered the PNPase homologue GPSI [originally named after its ability to synthesize (p)ppGpp (19)] to be the second-most likely mediator of RNA polyadenylation in Streptomyces spp.; the E. coli PNPase has been known from its initial characterization to be able to generate polyribonucleotides and only later became recognized as one of the major exoribonucleases in E. coli. Additionally, Bralley and Jones (2) have observed that RNA tails in S. coelicolor are heterogeneous, as has been observed for 3' additions by E. coli PNPase (29). To learn whether the Streptomyces PNPase-like protein is able to polyadenylate RNA, we performed modified polyadenylation assays without the addition of phosphate, which triggers the exoribonucleolytic activity of PNPase. Purified PNPase-like protein and NTF from Streptomyces spp. and PNPase from E. coli were incubated with labeled RNA and ADP. Figure 3A shows that the Streptomyces PNPase-like protein is able to utilize ADP for polyadenylation of RNA. E. coli PNPase can also utilize ADP, whereas Streptomyces NTF was not active in these assays. These results show that the Streptomyces PNPase-like protein, in addition to being a phosphorylytic exoribonuclease, can act as a PAP.
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FIG. 3. Polyadenylation
assay with PNPase and SCNTF using GGG-RNA I as the substrate.
(A) Polyadenylation assays with His-tagged PNPase-like
protein from E. coli or S. coelicolor and with
His-tagged S. coelicolor NTF for the indicated times. Lanes:
0, no protein added; ECPNP; PNPase from E. coli; SCPNP,
PNPase-like protein from S. coelicolor; SCNTF, NTF from S.
coelicolor. (B) Polyadenylation assay with GST-tagged
PNPase-like protein from S. antibioticus and SCNTF. Lanes: 0,
no protein added; ECPAP, PAP from E. coli; GST, GST alone;
GST-SAPNP, GST-tagged S. antibioticus PNPase-like protein;
SCNTF, S. coelicolor NTF. (C) Sequence comparison
between the PNPase-like proteins from S. antibioticus and
S. coelicolor. The two amino acid sequences were aligned and
visualized using the BoxShade server
(http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/BOX_form.html). The
sequences have 93%
identity.
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The finding that the only NTF predicted from S. coelicolor genome DNA sequence analysis is a CCA-adding enzyme and does not participate in the polyadenylation process raises the question of where in phylogeny these structurally related proteins diverged evolutionarily to display disparate enzymatic activities. tRNA requires a CCA triplet at the 3' end in order to function; as Streptomyces and many other bacterial species generate tRNAs lacking CCA ends, these bacteria require CCA-adding enzymes to produce functional tRNAs. On the other hand, species such as E. coli produce tRNA primary transcripts that already contain functional 3' ends and thus do not need the CCA-adding and -repairing activities of these enzymes. Two separate gene sequences that contain NTF motifs occur not only in Proteobacteria but also in the Thermus/Deinococcus, Spirochaetales, and Planctomyces/Chlamydia/Verrucomicrobium groups, suggesting the presence of both a tRNA NTF (i.e., putative CCA-adding enzyme) and a PAP in these organisms. Potentially, PAP I may have evolved from duplication of a gene encoding the CCA-adding enzyme in one of these species. Interestingly, even among Firmicutes, which includes the Bacillus/Clostridium and Actinobacteria groupings, there are species differences, and among Bacillacea, B. subtilis contains one gene that includes an NTF motif whereas B. halodurans has two (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/Browser). We have not been successful in generating an S. coelicolor pnp mutant, suggesting that, unlike E. coli and B. subtilis, but like Synechocystis strain PCC6803, this organism requires PNPase for viability.
PNPase is a multifunctional enzyme and can act both as an exoribonuclease and a polyribonucleotide synthetase. It was believed that the intracellular concentrations of phosphate in E. coli are too high for PNPase to act as a tail maker and that the enzyme acts solely in vivo in this species as an RNase; however, recently it was found that E. coli PNPase has PAP activity in cells grown in Luria broth, which is plentiful in phosphate (29). Other bacterial species living under conditions where phosphate is limiting may have separate means of modulating the synthetic and exonucleolytic activities of PNPase-like proteins, for example, modifications of PNPase or interactions between PNPase and either RNA or other cellular proteins. PNPase can exist in E. coli in several different forms (32), and potentially, these forms may interact differentially with substrates or with other cellular proteins. Both PNPase and PAP I are associated in vitro (for a review, see reference 6) and in vivo (24, 25, 32) with other proteins in E. coli. In addition to interacting with RNase E in vitro, E. coli PAP I interacts in vitro with several DEAD box RNA helicases (33) and both in vitro and in vivo with the Sm-like protein Hfq, which has been shown to affect mRNA stability and improve poly(A) tail production (13, 21, 43). The Streptomyces PNPase-like protein interacts physically with the Streptomyces RNase E homologue RNase ES (22).
The mechanism that enables preferential incorporation of adenosine residues by PNPase into polyribonucleotide tails that include other nucleotides is also not known. However, the finding that E. coli, and possibly other bacteria, have proofreading systems that interact with PAP I and ensure that this enzyme only includes A's in the tails suggests that the composition of tails is biologically important (28, 47). E. coli normally lives in a nutrient-rich environment where ATP may serve as a natural source for polyadenylation. Streptomyces species inhabit environments with limited supplies of nutrients. Polyadenylation of RNA by ADP may provide a way to preserve ATP and energy for other purposes.
This study was supported by a fellowship from the Wenner-Gren Center Foundation for Scientific Research to B.S. and by NIH grant GM-54158 to S.N.C.
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