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Genome-Wide Study of mRNA Degradation and Transcript Elongation in Escherichia coli

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2015

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EMBO
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Chen, Huiyi, Katsuyuki Shiroguchi, Hao Ge, and Xiaoliang Sunney Xie. 2015. “Genome-Wide Study of mRNA Degradation and Transcript Elongation in Escherichia coli.” Molecular Systems Biology 11 (1): 781.

Abstract

An essential part of gene expression is the coordination of RNA synthesis and degradation, which occurs in the same cellular compartment in bacteria. Here, we report a genome‐wide RNA degradation study in Escherichia coli using RNA‐seq, and present evidence that the stereotypical exponential RNA decay curve obtained using initiation inhibitor, rifampicin, consists of two phases: residual RNA synthesis, a delay in the interruption of steady state that is dependent on distance relative to the mRNA's 5′ end, and the exponential decay. This gives a more accurate RNA lifetime and RNA polymerase elongation rate simultaneously genome‐wide. Transcripts typically have a single RNA decay constant along all positions, which is distinct between different operons, indicating that RNA stability is unlikely determined by local sequences. These measurements allowed us to establish a model for RNA processing involving co‐transcriptional degradation, providing quantitative description of the macromolecular coordination in gene expression in bacteria on a system‐wide level.

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modeling, mRNA decay, RNAP elongation, RNA-seq, transcription

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