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RNA thermometer

An RNA thermometer (or RNA thermosensor) is a temperature-sensitive non-coding RNA molecule which regulates gene expression.[1] Its unique characteristic it is that it does not need proteins or metabolites to function, but only reacts to temperature changes.[2] RNA thermometers often regulate genes required during either a heat shock or cold shock response, but have been implicated in other regulatory roles such as in pathogenicity and starvation.[1]

The FourU thermometer RNA motif, with the Shine-Dalgarno sequence highlighted.

In general, RNA thermometers operate by changing their secondary structure and tertiary structure[3] in response to temperature fluctuations. This structural transition can then expose or occlude important regions of RNA such as a ribosome binding site, which then affects the translation rate of a nearby protein-coding gene.

RNA thermometers, along with riboswitches, are used as examples in support of the RNA world hypothesis. This theory proposes that RNA was once the sole nucleic acid present in cells, and was replaced by the current DNA → RNA → protein system.[4]

Examples of RNA thermometers include FourU,[5] the Hsp90 cis-regulatory element,[6] the ROSE element,[7] the Lig RNA thermometer,[8] and the Hsp17 thermometer.[9]

Discovery edit

The first temperature-sensitive RNA element was reported in 1989.[10] Prior to this research, mutations upstream from the transcription start site in a lambda (λ) phage cIII mRNA were found to affect the level of translation of the cIII protein.[11] This protein is involved in selection of either a lytic or lysogenic life cycle in λ phage, with high concentrations of cIII promoting lysogeny.[11] Further study of this upstream RNA region identified two alternative secondary structures; experimental study found the structures to be interchangeable, and dependent on both magnesium ion concentration and temperature.[10][12] This RNA thermometer is now thought to encourage entry to a lytic cycle under heat stress in order for the bacteriophage to rapidly replicate and escape the host cell.[1]

The term "RNA thermometer" was not coined until 1999,[13] when it was applied to the rpoH RNA element identified in Escherichia coli.[14] More recently, bioinformatics searches have been employed to uncover several novel candidate RNA thermometers.[15] Traditional sequence-based searches are inefficient, however, as the secondary structure of the element is much more conserved than the nucleic acid sequence.[15]

Biological reactions and organism are sensitive to temperature for cell function. RNA thermometers are an efficient way to respond to temperature because as they allow cells to monitor and sense changes to maintain the cell alive and stable. DNA, RNA, or protein-induced mechanisms avoid small changes because by sensing any external changes[16]

Bacteria use RNA thermometers to enter and survive in their hosts by mounting themselves to their host and causing fluctuations in their temperature. The bacteria can respond quickly against heat-shock and cold-shock conditions since RNA thermometers control gene expression at a translational level. [16]

The first RNA thermometer discovered in chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, found in the 5’-UTR of the psaA mRNA. Its function was different especially because it was considered absent, it has a hairpin-type secondary structure that protects the Shine–Dalgarno sequence when temperature is low, but once a change occurs in temperature, it melts and activates protein production.[2] C. reinhardtii’s RNA thermometer research is the entryway to observing the chloroplast of photosynthetic organisms for gene regulation and how it can be used for agriculture at some point in the future since it helps plants get accustomed to external temperature.[2]

Distribution edit

Most known RNA thermometers are located in the 5′ untranslated region (UTR) of messenger RNA encoding heat shock proteins—though it has been suggested this fact may be due, in part, to sampling bias and inherent difficulties of detecting short, unconserved RNA sequences in genomic data.[17][18]

Though predominantly found in prokaryotes, a potential RNA thermometer has been found in mammals including humans.[19] The candidate thermosensor heat shock RNA-1 (HSR1) activates heat-shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1) and induces protective proteins when cell temperature exceeds 37 °C (body temperature), thus preventing the cells from overheating.[19]

The first RNA thermometer discovered in chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, found in the 5’-UTR of the psaA mRNA. Its function was different especially because it was considered absent, it has a hairpin-type secondary structure that protects the Shine–Dalgarno sequence when temperature is low, but once a change occurs in temperature, it melts and activates protein production.[2] C. reinhardtii’s RNA thermometer research is the entryway to observing the chloroplast of photosynthetic organisms for gene regulation and how it can be used for agriculture at some point in the future since it helps plants get accustomed to external temperature.[2]

ROSE elements, are a bacterial RNA thermometer class that regulates the activation of genes that have small heat shock proteins. It melts at a moderate level parallel to the increase of the temperature surrounding its environment. Once it fully melts at a high temperature of ~42°C, it proceeds to release of Shine–Dalgarno and the AUG start codon. RNA Thermometers can also be found in some plant symbiotes or pathogens, symbiotes and pathogens use the RNA thermometers to regulate the plant's gene expression.[3] A well studied symbiotic bacteria is the Rhizobiaceae family. In majority of the rhizobial species, ROSE elements (cis-acting) were visible controlling heat-shock genes.[3]

Structure edit

 
3D representation of the structure of the ROSE RNA thermometer.[20]

RNA thermometers are structurally simple and can be made from short RNA sequences; the smallest is just 44 nucleotides and is found in the mRNA of a heat-shock protein, hsp17, in Synechocystis species PCC 6803.[9] Generally these RNA elements range in length from 60 to 110 nucleotides[21] and they typically contain a hairpin with a small number of mismatched base pairs which reduce the stability of the structure, thereby allowing easier unfolding in response to a temperature increase.[17]

Detailed structural analysis of the ROSE RNA thermometer revealed that the mismatched bases are actually engaged in nonstandard basepairing that preserves the helical structure of the RNA (see figure). The unusual basepairs consist of G-G, U-U, and UC-U pairs. Since these noncanonical base pairs are relatively unstable, increased temperature causes local melting of the RNA structure in this region, exposing the Shine-Dalgarno sequence.[20]

Some RNA thermometers are significantly more complex than a single hairpin, as in the case of a region found in CspA mRNA which is thought to contain a pseudoknot, as well as multiple hairpins.[22][23]

Synthetic RNA thermometers have been designed with just a simple single-hairpin structure.[24] However, the secondary structure of such short RNA thermometers can be sensitive to mutation, as a single base change can render the hairpin inactive in vivo.[25]

Mechanism edit

 
A stable hairpin (left) unwinds at a higher temperature (right). The highlighted Shine-Dalgarno sequence becomes exposed, allowing the binding of the 30S ribosomal subunit.[1]

RNA thermometers are found in the 5′ UTR of messenger RNA, upstream of a protein-coding gene.[1] Here they are able to occlude the ribosome binding site (RBS) and prevent translation of the mRNA into protein.[17] As temperature increases, the hairpin structure can 'melt' and expose the RBS or Shine-Dalgarno sequence to permit binding of the small ribosomal subunit (30S), which then assembles other translation machinery.[1] The start codon, typically found 8 nucleotides downstream of the Shine-Dalgarno sequence,[17] signals the beginning of a protein-coding gene which is then translated to a peptide product by the ribosome. In addition to this cis-acting mechanism, a lone example of a trans-acting RNA thermometer has been found in RpoS mRNA where it is thought to be involved in the starvation response.[1]

A specific example of an RNA thermometer motif is the FourU thermometer found in Salmonella enterica.[5] When exposed to temperatures above 45 °C, the stem-loop that base-pairs opposite the Shine-Dalgarno sequence becomes unpaired and allows the mRNA to enter the ribosome for translation to occur.[25] Mg2+ ion concentration has also been shown to affect the stability of FourU.[26] The most well-studied RNA thermometer is found in the rpoH gene in Escherichia coli.[27] This thermosensor upregulates heat shock proteins under high temperatures through σ32, a specialised heat-shock sigma factor.[13]

Though typically associated with heat-induced protein expression, RNA thermometers can also regulate cold-shock proteins.[22] For example, the expression of two 7kDa proteins are regulated by an RNA thermometer in the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus[28] and a similar mechanism has been identified in Enterobacteriales.[23]

RNA thermometers sensitive to temperatures of 37 °C can be used by pathogens to activate infection-specific genes.[17] For example, the upregulation of prfA, encoding a key transcriptional regulator of virulence genes in Listeria monocytogenes, was demonstrated by fusing the 5′ DNA of prfA to the green fluorescent protein gene; the gene fusion was then transcribed from the T7 promoter in E. coli, and fluorescence was observed at 37 °C but not at 30 °C.[29]

Implications for the RNA world hypothesis edit

The RNA world hypothesis states that RNA was once both the carrier of hereditary information and enzymatically active, with different sequences acting as biocatalysts, regulators and sensors.[30] The hypothesis then proposes that modern DNA, RNA and protein-based life evolved and selection replaced the majority of RNA's roles with other biomolecules.[4]

RNA thermometers and riboswitches are thought to be evolutionarily ancient due to their wide-scale distribution in distantly-related organisms.[31] It has been proposed that, in the RNA world, RNA thermosensors would have been responsible for temperature-dependent regulation of other RNA molecules.[4][32] RNA thermometers in modern organisms may be molecular fossils which could hint at a previously more widespread importance in an RNA world.[4]

Other examples edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Narberhaus F, Waldminghaus T, Chowdhury S (January 2006). "RNA thermometers". FEMS Microbiology Reviews. 30 (1): 3–16. doi:10.1111/j.1574-6976.2005.004.x. PMID 16438677.
  2. ^ a b c d e Raza A, Siddique KH, Hu Z (February 2024). "Chloroplast gene control: unlocking RNA thermometer mechanisms in photosynthetic systems". Trends in Plant Science. doi:10.1016/j.tplants.2024.01.005. PMID 38311501.
  3. ^ a b c Thomas SE, Balcerowicz M, Chung BY (2022-08-17). "RNA structure mediated thermoregulation: What can we learn from plants?". Frontiers in Plant Science. 13: 938570. doi:10.3389/fpls.2022.938570. PMC 9450479. PMID 36092413.
  4. ^ a b c d Atkins JF, Gesteland RF, Cech T (2006). The RNA world: the nature of modern RNA suggests a prebiotic RNA world. Plainview, N.Y: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. ISBN 978-0-87969-739-6.
  5. ^ a b Waldminghaus T, Heidrich N, Brantl S, Narberhaus F (July 2007). "FourU: a novel type of RNA thermometer in Salmonella". Molecular Microbiology. 65 (2): 413–424. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2958.2007.05794.x. PMID 17630972.
  6. ^ a b Ahmed R, Duncan RF (November 2004). "Translational regulation of Hsp90 mRNA. AUG-proximal 5'-untranslated region elements essential for preferential heat shock translation". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 279 (48): 49919–49930. doi:10.1074/jbc.M404681200. PMID 15347681.
  7. ^ a b Nocker A, Hausherr T, Balsiger S, Krstulovic NP, Hennecke H, Narberhaus F (December 2001). "A mRNA-based thermosensor controls expression of rhizobial heat shock genes". Nucleic Acids Research. 29 (23): 4800–4807. doi:10.1093/nar/29.23.4800. PMC 96696. PMID 11726689.
  8. ^ Matsunaga J, Schlax PJ, Haake DA (November 2013). "Role for cis-acting RNA sequences in the temperature-dependent expression of the multiadhesive lig proteins in Leptospira interrogans". Journal of Bacteriology. 195 (22): 5092–5101. doi:10.1128/jb.00663-13. PMC 3811586. PMID 24013626.
  9. ^ a b Kortmann J, Sczodrok S, Rinnenthal J, Schwalbe H, Narberhaus F (April 2011). "Translation on demand by a simple RNA-based thermosensor". Nucleic Acids Research. 39 (7): 2855–2868. doi:10.1093/nar/gkq1252. PMC 3074152. PMID 21131278.
  10. ^ a b Altuvia S, Kornitzer D, Teff D, Oppenheim AB (November 1989). "Alternative mRNA structures of the cIII gene of bacteriophage lambda determine the rate of its translation initiation". Journal of Molecular Biology. 210 (2): 265–280. doi:10.1016/0022-2836(89)90329-X. PMID 2532257.
  11. ^ a b Altuvia S, Oppenheim AB (July 1986). "Translational regulatory signals within the coding region of the bacteriophage lambda cIII gene". Journal of Bacteriology. 167 (1): 415–419. doi:10.1128/jb.167.1.415-419.1986. PMC 212897. PMID 2941413.
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  14. ^ Morita MT, Tanaka Y, Kodama TS, Kyogoku Y, Yanagi H, Yura T (March 1999). "Translational induction of heat shock transcription factor sigma32: evidence for a built-in RNA thermosensor". Genes & Development. 13 (6): 655–665. doi:10.1101/gad.13.6.655. PMC 316556. PMID 10090722.
  15. ^ a b Waldminghaus T, Gaubig LC, Narberhaus F (November 2007). "Genome-wide bioinformatic prediction and experimental evaluation of potential RNA thermometers". Molecular Genetics and Genomics. 278 (5): 555–564. doi:10.1007/s00438-007-0272-7. PMID 17647020. S2CID 24747327.
  16. ^ a b Sharma P, Mondal K, Kumar S, Tamang S, Najar IN, Das S, et al. (October 2022). "RNA thermometers in bacteria: Role in thermoregulation". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. Gene Regulatory Mechanisms. 1865 (7): 194871. doi:10.1016/j.bbagrm.2022.194871. PMID 36041664.
  17. ^ a b c d e Narberhaus F (2010). "Translational control of bacterial heat shock and virulence genes by temperature-sensing mRNAs". RNA Biology. 7 (1): 84–89. doi:10.4161/rna.7.1.10501. PMID 20009504.
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  19. ^ a b Shamovsky I, Ivannikov M, Kandel ES, Gershon D, Nudler E (March 2006). "RNA-mediated response to heat shock in mammalian cells". Nature. 440 (7083): 556–560. Bibcode:2006Natur.440..556S. doi:10.1038/nature04518. PMID 16554823. S2CID 4311262.
  20. ^ a b Chowdhury S, Maris C, Allain FH, Narberhaus F (June 2006). "Molecular basis for temperature sensing by an RNA thermometer". The EMBO Journal. 25 (11): 2487–2497. doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7601128. PMC 1478195. PMID 16710302.
  21. ^ Waldminghaus T, Fippinger A, Alfsmann J, Narberhaus F (December 2005). "RNA thermometers are common in alpha- and gamma-proteobacteria". Biological Chemistry. 386 (12): 1279–1286. doi:10.1515/BC.2005.145. PMID 16336122. S2CID 84557068.
  22. ^ a b Breaker RR (January 2010). "RNA switches out in the cold". Molecular Cell. 37 (1): 1–2. doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2009.12.032. PMC 5315359. PMID 20129048.
  23. ^ a b Giuliodori AM, Di Pietro F, Marzi S, Masquida B, Wagner R, Romby P, et al. (January 2010). "The cspA mRNA is a thermosensor that modulates translation of the cold-shock protein CspA". Molecular Cell. 37 (1): 21–33. doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2009.11.033. PMID 20129052.
  24. ^ Neupert J, Karcher D, Bock R (November 2008). "Design of simple synthetic RNA thermometers for temperature-controlled gene expression in Escherichia coli". Nucleic Acids Research. 36 (19): e124. doi:10.1093/nar/gkn545. PMC 2577334. PMID 18753148.
  25. ^ a b Nikolova EN, Al-Hashimi HM (September 2010). "Thermodynamics of RNA melting, one base pair at a time". RNA. 16 (9): 1687–1691. doi:10.1261/rna.2235010. PMC 2924531. PMID 20660079.
  26. ^ Rinnenthal J, Klinkert B, Narberhaus F, Schwalbe H (October 2011). "Modulation of the stability of the Salmonella fourU-type RNA thermometer". Nucleic Acids Research. 39 (18): 8258–8270. doi:10.1093/nar/gkr314. PMC 3185406. PMID 21727085.
  27. ^ Shah P, Gilchrist MA (July 2010). Spirin AS (ed.). "Is thermosensing property of RNA thermometers unique?". PLOS ONE. 5 (7): e11308. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...511308S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0011308. PMC 2896394. PMID 20625392.
  28. ^ Mega R, Manzoku M, Shinkai A, Nakagawa N, Kuramitsu S, Masui R (August 2010). "Very rapid induction of a cold shock protein by temperature downshift in Thermus thermophilus". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 399 (3): 336–340. doi:10.1016/j.bbrc.2010.07.065. PMID 20655297.
  29. ^ Johansson J, Mandin P, Renzoni A, Chiaruttini C, Springer M, Cossart P (September 2002). "An RNA thermosensor controls expression of virulence genes in Listeria monocytogenes". Cell. 110 (5): 551–561. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(02)00905-4. PMID 12230973.
  30. ^ Gilbert W (February 1986). "The RNA World". Nature. 319 (6055): 618. Bibcode:1986Natur.319..618G. doi:10.1038/319618a0.
  31. ^ Serganov A, Patel DJ (October 2007). "Ribozymes, riboswitches and beyond: regulation of gene expression without proteins". Nature Reviews. Genetics. 8 (10): 776–790. doi:10.1038/nrg2172. PMC 4689321. PMID 17846637.
  32. ^ Bocobza SE, Aharoni A (October 2008). "Switching the light on plant riboswitches". Trends in Plant Science. 13 (10): 526–533. doi:10.1016/j.tplants.2008.07.004. PMID 18778966.
  33. ^ Gaubig LC, Waldminghaus T, Narberhaus F (January 2011). "Multiple layers of control govern expression of the Escherichia coli ibpAB heat-shock operon". Microbiology. 157 (Pt 1): 66–76. doi:10.1099/mic.0.043802-0. PMID 20864473.
  34. ^ Balsiger S, Ragaz C, Baron C, Narberhaus F (October 2004). "Replicon-specific regulation of small heat shock genes in Agrobacterium tumefaciens". Journal of Bacteriology. 186 (20): 6824–6829. doi:10.1128/JB.186.20.6824-6829.2004. PMC 522190. PMID 15466035.

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An RNA thermometer or RNA thermosensor is a temperature sensitive non coding RNA molecule which regulates gene expression 1 Its unique characteristic it is that it does not need proteins or metabolites to function but only reacts to temperature changes 2 RNA thermometers often regulate genes required during either a heat shock or cold shock response but have been implicated in other regulatory roles such as in pathogenicity and starvation 1 The FourU thermometer RNA motif with the Shine Dalgarno sequence highlighted In general RNA thermometers operate by changing their secondary structure and tertiary structure 3 in response to temperature fluctuations This structural transition can then expose or occlude important regions of RNA such as a ribosome binding site which then affects the translation rate of a nearby protein coding gene RNA thermometers along with riboswitches are used as examples in support of the RNA world hypothesis This theory proposes that RNA was once the sole nucleic acid present in cells and was replaced by the current DNA RNA protein system 4 Examples of RNA thermometers include FourU 5 the Hsp90 cis regulatory element 6 the ROSE element 7 the Lig RNA thermometer 8 and the Hsp17 thermometer 9 Contents 1 Discovery 2 Distribution 3 Structure 4 Mechanism 5 Implications for the RNA world hypothesis 6 Other examples 7 ReferencesDiscovery editThe first temperature sensitive RNA element was reported in 1989 10 Prior to this research mutations upstream from the transcription start site in a lambda l phage cIII mRNA were found to affect the level of translation of the cIII protein 11 This protein is involved in selection of either a lytic or lysogenic life cycle in l phage with high concentrations of cIII promoting lysogeny 11 Further study of this upstream RNA region identified two alternative secondary structures experimental study found the structures to be interchangeable and dependent on both magnesium ion concentration and temperature 10 12 This RNA thermometer is now thought to encourage entry to a lytic cycle under heat stress in order for the bacteriophage to rapidly replicate and escape the host cell 1 The term RNA thermometer was not coined until 1999 13 when it was applied to the rpoH RNA element identified in Escherichia coli 14 More recently bioinformatics searches have been employed to uncover several novel candidate RNA thermometers 15 Traditional sequence based searches are inefficient however as the secondary structure of the element is much more conserved than the nucleic acid sequence 15 Biological reactions and organism are sensitive to temperature for cell function RNA thermometers are an efficient way to respond to temperature because as they allow cells to monitor and sense changes to maintain the cell alive and stable DNA RNA or protein induced mechanisms avoid small changes because by sensing any external changes 16 Bacteria use RNA thermometers to enter and survive in their hosts by mounting themselves to their host and causing fluctuations in their temperature The bacteria can respond quickly against heat shock and cold shock conditions since RNA thermometers control gene expression at a translational level 16 The first RNA thermometer discovered in chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii found in the 5 UTR of the psaA mRNA Its function was different especially because it was considered absent it has a hairpin type secondary structure that protects the Shine Dalgarno sequence when temperature is low but once a change occurs in temperature it melts and activates protein production 2 C reinhardtii s RNA thermometer research is the entryway to observing the chloroplast of photosynthetic organisms for gene regulation and how it can be used for agriculture at some point in the future since it helps plants get accustomed to external temperature 2 Distribution editMost known RNA thermometers are located in the 5 untranslated region UTR of messenger RNA encoding heat shock proteins though it has been suggested this fact may be due in part to sampling bias and inherent difficulties of detecting short unconserved RNA sequences in genomic data 17 18 Though predominantly found in prokaryotes a potential RNA thermometer has been found in mammals including humans 19 The candidate thermosensor heat shock RNA 1 HSR1 activates heat shock transcription factor 1 HSF1 and induces protective proteins when cell temperature exceeds 37 C body temperature thus preventing the cells from overheating 19 The first RNA thermometer discovered in chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii found in the 5 UTR of the psaA mRNA Its function was different especially because it was considered absent it has a hairpin type secondary structure that protects the Shine Dalgarno sequence when temperature is low but once a change occurs in temperature it melts and activates protein production 2 C reinhardtii s RNA thermometer research is the entryway to observing the chloroplast of photosynthetic organisms for gene regulation and how it can be used for agriculture at some point in the future since it helps plants get accustomed to external temperature 2 ROSE elements are a bacterial RNA thermometer class that regulates the activation of genes that have small heat shock proteins It melts at a moderate level parallel to the increase of the temperature surrounding its environment Once it fully melts at a high temperature of 42 C it proceeds to release of Shine Dalgarno and the AUG start codon RNA Thermometers can also be found in some plant symbiotes or pathogens symbiotes and pathogens use the RNA thermometers to regulate the plant s gene expression 3 A well studied symbiotic bacteria is the Rhizobiaceae family In majority of the rhizobial species ROSE elements cis acting were visible controlling heat shock genes 3 Structure edit nbsp 3D representation of the structure of the ROSE RNA thermometer 20 RNA thermometers are structurally simple and can be made from short RNA sequences the smallest is just 44 nucleotides and is found in the mRNA of a heat shock protein hsp17 in Synechocystis species PCC 6803 9 Generally these RNA elements range in length from 60 to 110 nucleotides 21 and they typically contain a hairpin with a small number of mismatched base pairs which reduce the stability of the structure thereby allowing easier unfolding in response to a temperature increase 17 Detailed structural analysis of the ROSE RNA thermometer revealed that the mismatched bases are actually engaged in nonstandard basepairing that preserves the helical structure of the RNA see figure The unusual basepairs consist of G G U U and UC U pairs Since these noncanonical base pairs are relatively unstable increased temperature causes local melting of the RNA structure in this region exposing the Shine Dalgarno sequence 20 Some RNA thermometers are significantly more complex than a single hairpin as in the case of a region found in CspA mRNA which is thought to contain a pseudoknot as well as multiple hairpins 22 23 Synthetic RNA thermometers have been designed with just a simple single hairpin structure 24 However the secondary structure of such short RNA thermometers can be sensitive to mutation as a single base change can render the hairpin inactive in vivo 25 Mechanism edit nbsp A stable hairpin left unwinds at a higher temperature right The highlighted Shine Dalgarno sequence becomes exposed allowing the binding of the 30S ribosomal subunit 1 RNA thermometers are found in the 5 UTR of messenger RNA upstream of a protein coding gene 1 Here they are able to occlude the ribosome binding site RBS and prevent translation of the mRNA into protein 17 As temperature increases the hairpin structure can melt and expose the RBS or Shine Dalgarno sequence to permit binding of the small ribosomal subunit 30S which then assembles other translation machinery 1 The start codon typically found 8 nucleotides downstream of the Shine Dalgarno sequence 17 signals the beginning of a protein coding gene which is then translated to a peptide product by the ribosome In addition to this cis acting mechanism a lone example of a trans acting RNA thermometer has been found in RpoS mRNA where it is thought to be involved in the starvation response 1 A specific example of an RNA thermometer motif is the FourU thermometer found in Salmonella enterica 5 When exposed to temperatures above 45 C the stem loop that base pairs opposite the Shine Dalgarno sequence becomes unpaired and allows the mRNA to enter the ribosome for translation to occur 25 Mg2 ion concentration has also been shown to affect the stability of FourU 26 The most well studied RNA thermometer is found in the rpoH gene in Escherichia coli 27 This thermosensor upregulates heat shock proteins under high temperatures through s32 a specialised heat shock sigma factor 13 Though typically associated with heat induced protein expression RNA thermometers can also regulate cold shock proteins 22 For example the expression of two 7kDa proteins are regulated by an RNA thermometer in the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus 28 and a similar mechanism has been identified in Enterobacteriales 23 RNA thermometers sensitive to temperatures of 37 C can be used by pathogens to activate infection specific genes 17 For example the upregulation of prfA encoding a key transcriptional regulator of virulence genes in Listeria monocytogenes was demonstrated by fusing the 5 DNA of prfA to the green fluorescent protein gene the gene fusion was then transcribed from the T7 promoter in E coli and fluorescence was observed at 37 C but not at 30 C 29 Implications for the RNA world hypothesis editMain article RNA world hypothesis The RNA world hypothesis states that RNA was once both the carrier of hereditary information and enzymatically active with different sequences acting as biocatalysts regulators and sensors 30 The hypothesis then proposes that modern DNA RNA and protein based life evolved and selection replaced the majority of RNA s roles with other biomolecules 4 RNA thermometers and riboswitches are thought to be evolutionarily ancient due to their wide scale distribution in distantly related organisms 31 It has been proposed that in the RNA world RNA thermosensors would have been responsible for temperature dependent regulation of other RNA molecules 4 32 RNA thermometers in modern organisms may be molecular fossils which could hint at a previously more widespread importance in an RNA world 4 Other examples editHsp90 cis regulatory element regulates hsp90 in Drosophila increasing the translation rate of the heat shock protein at high temperatures 6 The ibpAB operon of E coli is predicted to contain two co operative RNA thermometers a ROSE element and the IbpB thermometer 33 ROSE1 and ROSEAT2 are found in hyphomicrobiales Bradyrhizobium japonicum and Agrobacterium tumefaciens respectively They exist in the 5 UTR of HspA mRNA and repress heat shock protein translation at physiological temperatures 7 34 Cyanobacterial RNA thermometers Intergenic RNA thermometer Neisseria RNA thermometers Lig RNA thermometerReferences edit a b c d e f g Narberhaus F Waldminghaus T Chowdhury S January 2006 RNA thermometers FEMS Microbiology Reviews 30 1 3 16 doi 10 1111 j 1574 6976 2005 004 x PMID 16438677 a b c d e Raza A Siddique KH Hu Z February 2024 Chloroplast gene control unlocking RNA thermometer mechanisms in photosynthetic systems Trends in Plant Science doi 10 1016 j tplants 2024 01 005 PMID 38311501 a b c Thomas SE Balcerowicz M Chung BY 2022 08 17 RNA structure mediated thermoregulation What can we learn from plants Frontiers in Plant Science 13 938570 doi 10 3389 fpls 2022 938570 PMC 9450479 PMID 36092413 a b c d Atkins JF Gesteland RF Cech T 2006 The RNA world the nature of modern RNA suggests a prebiotic RNA world Plainview N Y Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISBN 978 0 87969 739 6 a b Waldminghaus T Heidrich N Brantl S Narberhaus F July 2007 FourU a novel type of 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