[No authors listed]
A type II toxin-antitoxin system in Escherichiaâcoli, rnlA-rnlB, functions as an anti-phage mechanism. RnlA is a toxin with an endoribonuclease activity and the cognate RnlB inhibits RnlA toxicity in E.âcoli cells. After bacteriophage T4 infection, RnlA is activated by the disappearance of RnlB, resulting in the rapid degradation of T4 mRNAs and consequently no T4 propagation, when T4 dmd is defective: Dmd is an antitoxin against RnlA for promoting own propagation. Previous studies suggested that the activation of RnlA after T4 infection was regulated by multiple components. Here, we provide the evidence that RNase HI is an essential factor for activation of RnlA. The dmd mutant phage could grow on ÎrnhA (encoding RNase HI) cells, in which RnlA-mediated mRNA cleavage activity was defective. RNase HI bound to RnlAâ in vivoâ and enhanced the RNA cleavage activity of RnlAâ in vitro. In addition, ectopic expression of RnlA in ÎrnlAB ÎrnhA cells has less effect on cell toxicity and RnlA-mediated mRNA degradation than in ÎrnlAB cells. This is the first example of a direct factor for activation of a toxin.
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