Publication:
An effort to make sense of antisense transcription in bacteria

Date

2012

Director

Publisher

Taylor & Francis
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

Project identifier

MICINN//BIO2008-05284-C02-01/ES/recolecta
MICINN//BIO2011-30503-C02-02/ES/recolecta
ES/6PN/BFU2011-23222

Abstract

Analysis of bacterial transcriptomes have shown the existence of a genome-wide process of overlapping transcription due to the presence of antisense RNAs, as well as mRNAs that overlapped in their entire length or in some portion of the 5′- and 3′-UTR regions. The biological advantages of such overlapping transcription are unclear but may play important regulatory roles at the level of transcription, RNA stability and translation. In a recent report, the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is observed to generate genome-wide overlapping transcription in the same bacterial cells leading to a collection of short RNA fragments generated by the endoribonuclease III, RNase III. This processing appears most prominently in Gram-positive bacteria. The implications of both the use of pervasive overlapping transcription and the processing of these double stranded templates into short RNAs are explored and the consequences discussed.

Description

This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in RNA Biology on August 1st 2012, available online: http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/rna.21167.

Keywords

Overlapping transcription, RNase III, RNA processing, Bacteria, Transcriptome

Department

IdAB. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología / Agrobioteknologiako Institutua

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

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© 2012 Landes Bioscience

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