U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

SRX20579235: GSM7440580: ΔproQ, 0 min, biol rep 5 (Sample 108); Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium; OTHER
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina HiSeq 2000) run: 9.1M spots, 682.5M bases, 250.6Mb downloads

External Id: GSM7440580_r1
Submitted by: Helmholtz Institute for RNA-based Infection Research
Study: Improved RNA stability estimation through Bayesian modeling reveals most bacterial transcripts have sub-minute half-lives [RIF-seq]
show Abstracthide Abstract
RNA decay is a crucial mechanism for regulating gene expression in response to environmental stresses. In bacteria, RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are known to be involved in post-transcriptional regulation, but their global impact on RNA half-lives has not been extensively studied. To shed light on the role of the major RBPs ProQ and CspC/E in maintaining RNA stability, we performed RNA sequencing of Salmonella enterica over a time course following treatment with the transcription initiation inhibitor rifampicin (RIF-seq) in the presence and absence of these RBPs. We developed a hierarchical Bayesian model that corrects for confounding factors in rifampicin RNA stability assays and enables us to identify differentially decaying transcripts transcriptome-wide. Our analysis revealed that the median RNA half-life in Salmonella in early stationary phase is less than 1 minute, a third of previous estimates. We found that over half of the 500 most long-lived transcripts are bound by at least one major RBP, suggesting a general role for RBPs in shaping the transcriptome. Integrating differential stability estimates with CLIP-seq revealed that approximately 30% of transcripts with ProQ binding sites and more than 40% with CspC/E binding sites in coding or 3' untranslated regions decay differentially in the absence of the respective RBP. Analysis of differentially destabilized transcripts identified a role for both proteins in the control of respiration, and for ProQ in the oxidative stress response. Our findings provide new insights into post-transcriptional regulation by ProQ and CspC/E, and the importance of RBPs in regulating gene expression. Overall design: Sample 1-12: CLIP-seq, Sample 13-132 RIF-seq RNA sequencing of Salmonella (SL1344) in early stationary phase over a time course following treatment with the transcription initiation inhibitor rifampicin (RIF-seq)
Sample: ΔproQ, 0 min, biol rep 5 (Sample 108)
SAMN35571091 • SRS17881225 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: GSM7440580
Instrument: Illumina HiSeq 2000
Strategy: OTHER
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: other
Layout: SINGLE
Construction protocol: Hot phenol extraction followed by DNase treatment. RNA-seq libraries were prepared by Vertis AG (Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany). The ribodepleted RNA samples were fragmented using ultrasound (4 pulses of 30 s each at 4 C). Subsequently, an oligonucleotide adapter was ligated to the 3' end of the RNA molecules. First-strand cDNA synthesis was performed using M-MLV reverse transcriptase and the 3' adapter as primer. The first-strand cDNA was purified and the 5' Illumina TruSeq sequencing adapter was ligated to the 3' end of the antisense cDNA. The resulting cDNA was PCR-amplified to about 10-20 ng/ul using a high fidelity DNA polymerase. cDNA was purified with the Agencourt AMPure XP kit (Beckman Coulter Genomics).
Runs: 1 run, 9.1M spots, 682.5M bases, 250.6Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR248069069,099,576682.5M250.6Mb2024-03-26

ID:
28007061

Supplemental Content

Search details

See more...

Recent activity