Cell Reports (Mar 2020)
Hierarchy in Hfq Chaperon Occupancy of Small RNA Targets Plays a Major Role in Their Regulation
Abstract
Summary: Bacterial small RNAs (sRNAs) are posttranscriptional regulators of gene expression that base pair with complementary sequences on target mRNAs, often in association with the chaperone Hfq. Here, using experimentally identified sRNA-target pairs, along with gene expression measurements, we assess basic principles of regulation by sRNAs. We show that the sRNA sequence dictates the target repertoire, as point mutations in the sRNA shift the target set correspondingly. We distinguish two subsets of targets: targets showing changes in expression levels under overexpression of their sRNA regulator and unaffected targets that interact more sporadically with the sRNA. These differences among targets are associated with their Hfq occupancy, rather than with the sRNA-target base-pairing potential. Our results suggest that competition among targets over Hfq binding plays a major role in the regulatory outcome, possibly awarding targets with higher Hfq binding efficiency an advantage in the competition over binding to the sRNA. : Faigenbaum-Romm et al. analyze data of sRNA-target pairs and transcriptome measurements, revealing that only a subset of targets shows expression changes under overexpression of the sRNA. Analyzing various target features, they find that competition among targets over binding the chaperon Hfq plays a major role in the regulatory outcome. Keywords: small RNAs, Hfq, posttranscriptional regulation, RNA sequencing, RIL-seq