Substrate recognition and cryo-EM structure of the ribosome-bound TAC toxin of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Moïse Mansour, Emmanuel Giudice, Xibing Xu, Hatice Akarsu, Patricia Bordes, Valérie Guillet, Donna-Joe Bigot, Nawel Slama, et al. (15 authors)
Nature Communications · 2022-05
Abstract
Toxins of toxin-antitoxin systems use diverse mechanisms to control bacterial growth. Here, we focus on the deleterious toxin of the atypical tripartite toxin-antitoxin-chaperone (TAC) system of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, whose inhibition requires the concerted action of the antitoxin and its dedicated SecB-like chaperone. We show that the TAC toxin is a bona fide ribonuclease and identify exact cleavage sites in mRNA targets on a transcriptome-wide scale in vivo. mRNA cleavage by the toxin occurs after the second nucleotide of the ribosomal A-site codon during translation, with a strong preference for CCA codons in vivo. Finally, we report the cryo-EM structure of the ribosome-bound TAC toxin in the presence of native M. tuberculosis cspA mRNA, revealing the specific mechanism by which the TAC toxin interacts with the ribosome and the tRNA in the P-site to cleave its mRNA target.
MeSH terms
- Ribonuclease
- Antitoxin
- Biology
- Toxin
- Ribosome
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Ribosomal binding site
- Translation (biology)
- Endoribonuclease
- Messenger RNA
- Transfer RNA
- RNA
- Ribosomal RNA
- Internal ribosome entry site
- Cell biology
- RNase P
- Genetics