U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

SRX1471787: GSM1968389: MutRep2_6min; Escherichia coli; RNA-Seq
1 ILLUMINA (NextSeq 500) run: 15.3M spots, 1.1G bases, 486.8Mb downloads

Submitted by: NCBI (GEO)
Study: Spatial organization shapes the turnover of a bacterial transcriptome
show Abstracthide Abstract
Spatial organization of the transcriptome has emerged as a powerful means for regulating the post-transcriptional fate of RNA in eukaryotes; however, whether prokaryotes use RNA spatial organization as a mechanism for post-transcriptional regulation remains unclear. Here we used super-resolution microscopy to image the E. coli transcriptome and observed a genome-wide spatial organization of RNA: mRNAs encoding inner-membrane proteins are enriched at the membrane, whereas mRNAs encoding outer-membrane, cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins are distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Membrane enrichment is caused by co-translational insertion of signal peptides recognized by the signal-recognition particle. Our time-resolved RNA-sequencing and live-cell super-resolution imaging experiments revealed a physiological consequence of this spatial organization and the underlying mechanism: membrane localization enhances degradation rates of inner-membrane-protein mRNAs by placing them in proximity to membrane-bound RNA degradation enzymes. Together, these results demonstrate that the bacterial transcriptome is spatially organized and that this organization shapes the posttranscriptional Spatial organization of the transcriptome has emerged as a powerful means for regulating the post-transcriptional fate of RNA in eukaryotes; however, whether prokaryotes use RNA spatial organization as a mechanism for post-transcriptional regulation remains unclear. Here we used super-resolution microscopy to image the E. coli transcriptome and observed a genome-wide spatial organization of RNA: mRNAs encoding inner-membrane proteins are enriched at the membrane, whereas mRNAs encoding outer-membrane, cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins are distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Membrane enrichment is caused by co-translational insertion of signal peptides recognized by the signal-recognition particle. Our time-resolved RNA-sequencing and live-cell super-resolution imaging experiments revealed a physiological consequence of this spatial organization and the underlying mechanism: membrane localization enhances degradation rates of inner-membrane-protein mRNAs by placing them in proximity to membrane-bound RNA degradation enzymes. Together, these results demonstrate that the bacterial transcriptome is spatially organized and that this organization shapes the post-transcriptional dynamics of mRNAs. Overall design: We measure mRNA half-lives by measuring calibrated RNA abundances as a function of time after treatment with the transcription initiation inhibitor rifampicin.
Sample: MutRep2_6min
SAMN04326808 • SRS1199129 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Instrument: NextSeq 500
Strategy: RNA-Seq
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: cDNA
Layout: SINGLE
Construction protocol: Cells were collected as a function of time after rifampicin treatment at the specified times. RNA was extracted using the RNAsnap protocol. DNA was removed with Dnase I. rRNA was removed with the gram-negative RiboZero kit. Libraries were prepared with the RNAUltra directional kit from New England Biolabs for total RNA sequencing. For signal peptide fusions, cDNA was constructed using primers that target the signal-peptide-coding/barcode region of the fusion RNAs.
Experiment attributes:
GEO Accession: GSM1968389
Links:
Runs: 1 run, 15.3M spots, 1.1G bases, 486.8Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR298246415,277,0411.1G486.8Mb2016-06-08

ID:
2080661

Supplemental Content

Search details

See more...

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...