Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
CTnDOT is a 65-kb conjugative transposon present in
Bacteroides
spp. that confers resistance to erythromycin [
erm
(F)] and tetracycline [
tet
(Q)]. An interesting feature of CTnDOT is that both excision from the chromosome and transfer of CTnDOT are stimulated by exposure to tetracycline. However, when no tetracycline is present, transfer of CTnDOT is not detectable. Previous studies suggested that a region containing a small RNA, RteR, appeared to mediate repression of CTnDOT transfer; however, virtually nothing was known about RteR. We have demonstrated that RteR is a 90-nucleotide transcript that is not further processed. RteR inhibits conjugative transfer of CTnDOT by targeting the transfer region, a 13-kb operon that encodes the
tra
genes required to assemble the mating apparatus. We report here that RteR interacts with the region downstream of
traA
. Levels of the downstream
tra
mRNA are dramatically reduced when RteR is present. Further, RteR does not appear to decrease the half-life of the
tra
mRNA transcript, suggesting that RteR does not bind to the transcript to initiate RNase-dependent decay, similar to other
trans
-acting small RNAs. We predict that RteR may act to enhance termination of the
tra
operon within
traB
, which could account for the decreased abundance of the
tra
transcript downstream of
traA
and explain why the
tra
mRNA has the same half-life whether or not RteR is present. RteR is the only small RNA that has been characterized so far within the
Bacteroidetes
phylum.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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