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Nucleic Acids Research 2005 33(11):3636-3643; doi:10.1093/nar/gki675
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Published online 27 June 2005

© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
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Article

Ribonuclease PH plays a major role in the exonucleolytic maturation of CCA-containing tRNA precursors in Bacillus subtilis

Tingyi Wen, Irina A. Oussenko1, Olivier Pellegrini, David H. Bechhofer1 and Ciarán Condon*

CNRS UPR 9073 (affiliated with Université de Paris 7–Denis Diderot), Institut de Biologie Physico-Chimique 13 rue Pierre et Marie Curie, 75005 Paris, France 1Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University New York, NY 10029, USA

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +33 1 58 41 51 23; Fax: +33 1 58 41 50 20; Email: condon{at}ibpc.fr

Received May 11, 2005. Revised June 8, 2005. Accepted June 8, 2005.

In contrast to Escherichia coli, where all tRNAs have the CCA motif encoded by their genes, two classes of tRNA precursors exist in the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. Previous evidence had shown that ribonuclease Z (RNase Z) was responsible for the endonucleolytic maturation of the 3' end of those tRNAs lacking an encoded CCA motif, accounting for about one-third of its tRNAs. This suggested that a second pathway of tRNA maturation must exist for those precursors with an encoded CCA motif. In this paper, we examine the potential role of the four known exoribonucleases of B.subtilis, PNPase, RNase R, RNase PH and YhaM, in this alternative pathway. In the absence of RNase PH, precursors of CCA-containing tRNAs accumulate that are a few nucleotides longer than the mature tRNA species observed in wild-type strains or in the other single exonuclease mutants. Thus, RNase PH plays an important role in removing the last few nucleotides of the tRNA precursor in vivo. The presence of three or four exonuclease mutations in a single strain results in CCA-containing tRNA precursors of increasing size, suggesting that, as in E.coli, the exonucleolytic pathway consists of multiple redundant enzymes. Assays of purified RNase PH using in vitro-synthesized tRNA precursor substrates suggest that RNase PH is sensitive to the presence of a CCA motif. The division of labor between the endonucleolytic and exonucleolytic pathways observed in vivo can be explained by the inhibition of RNase Z by the CCA motif in CCA-containing tRNA precursors and by the inhibition of exonucleases by stable secondary structure in the 3' extensions of the majority of CCA-less tRNAs.


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