Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 287, Issue 16, 13 April 2012, Pages 12835-12847
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Enzymology
Growth and Translation Inhibition through Sequence-specific RNA Binding by Mycobacterium tuberculosis VapC Toxin*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.340109Get rights and content
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The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome harbors an unusually large number of toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules. Curiously, over half of these are VapBC (virulence-associated protein) family members. Nonetheless, the cellular target, precise mode of action, and physiological role of the VapC toxins in this important pathogen remain unclear. To better understand the function of this toxin family, we studied the features and biochemical properties of a prototype M. tuberculosis VapBC TA system, vapBC-mt4 (Rv0596c-Rv0595c). VapC-mt4 expression resulted in growth arrest, a hallmark of all TA toxins, in Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium smegmatis, and M. tuberculosis. Its expression led to translation inhibition accompanied by a gradual decrease in the steady-state levels of several mRNAs. VapC-mt4 exhibited sequence-specific endoribonuclease activity on mRNA templates at ACGC and AC(A/U)GC sequences. However, the cleavage activity of VapC-mt4 was comparatively weak relative to the TA toxin MazF-mt1 (Rv2801c). Unlike other TA toxins, translation inhibition and growth arrest preceded mRNA cleavage, suggesting that the RNA binding property of VapC-mt4, not RNA cleavage, initiates toxicity. In support of this hypothesis, expression of VapC-mt4 led to an increase in the recovery of total RNA with time in contrast to TA toxins that inhibit translation via direct mRNA cleavage. Additionally, VapC-mt4 exhibited stable, sequence-specific RNA binding in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Finally, VapC-mt4 inhibited protein synthesis in a cell-free system without cleaving the corresponding mRNA. Therefore, the activity of VapC-mt4 is mechanistically distinct from other TA toxins because it appears to primarily inhibit translation through selective, stable binding to RNA.

Bacterial Toxins
Protein Synthesis
Ribonuclease
RNA
Virulence Factors
Antitoxin
Latency
Translation
Tuberculosis

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*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grant AI072399 from the NIAID R21 (to R. N. H. and N. A. W.) and T32 Training Grant AI07403, Virus-Host Interactions in Eukaryotic Cells, from the NIAID (to J. D. S. and J. W. C. (awarded to G. Brewer)).

This article contains supplemental Figs. S1–S10.

1

Present address: National Emerging Infectious Disease Laboratory, Boston University, 650 Albany St., Boston, MA 02118.