The methyltransferase YfgB/RlmN is responsible for modification of adenosine 2503 in 23S rRNA

  1. Seok-Ming Toh1,
  2. Liqun Xiong1,
  3. Taeok Bae2, and
  4. Alexander S. Mankin1
  1. 1Center for Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois 60607, USA
  2. 2Indiana University School of Medicine, Gary-Northwest, Gary, Indiana 46408, USA

Abstract

A2503 in 23S rRNA of the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli is located in a functionally important region of the ribosome, at the entrance to the nascent peptide exit tunnel. In E. coli, and likely in other species, this adenosine residue is post-transcriptionally modified to m2A. The enzyme responsible for this modification was previously unknown. We identified E. coli protein YfgB, which belongs to the radical SAM enzyme superfamily, as the methyltransferase that modifies A2503 of 23S rRNA to m2A. Inactivation of the yfgB gene in E. coli led to the loss of modification at nucleotide A2503 of 23S rRNA as revealed by primer extension analysis and thin layer chromatography. The A2503 modification was restored when YfgB protein was expressed in the yfgB knockout strain. A similar protein was shown to catalyze post-transcriptional modification of A2503 in 23S rRNA in Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus. The yfgB knockout strain loses in competition with wild type in a co-growth experiment, indicating functional importance of A2503 modification. The location of A2503 in the exit tunnel suggests its possible involvement in interaction with the nascent peptide and raises the possibility that its post-transcriptional modification may influence such an interaction.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Reprint requests to: Alexander S. Mankin, Center for Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, m/c 870, University of Illinois, 900 S. Ashland Avenue, Chicago, IL 60607, USA; e-mail: shura{at}uic.edu; fax: (312) 413-9303.

  • Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.814408.

    • Received September 6, 2007.
    • Accepted October 9, 2007.
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