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Common and phylogenetically widespread coding for peptides by bacterial small RNAs

View ORCID ProfileRobin C. Friedman, View ORCID ProfileStefan Kalkhof, View ORCID ProfileOlivia Doppelt-Azeroual, View ORCID ProfileStephan Mueller, View ORCID ProfileMartiná Chovancová, View ORCID ProfileMartin von Bergen, View ORCID ProfileBenno Schwikowski
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/030619
Robin C. Friedman
aSystems Biology Laboratory, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
bMolecular Microbial Pathogenesis Unit, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
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Stefan Kalkhof
cDepartment of Proteomics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
dCurrent Address: Department of Bioanalytics, University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Coburg, Coburg, Germany
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Olivia Doppelt-Azeroual
eCenter of Bioinformatics, Biostatistics and Integrative Biology, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
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Stephan Mueller
cDepartment of Proteomics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
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Martiná Chovancová
cDepartment of Proteomics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
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Martin von Bergen
cDepartment of Proteomics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
fDepartment of Metabolomics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
gCenter for Microbial Communities, Department of Chemistry and Bioscience, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark
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Benno Schwikowski
aSystems Biology Laboratory, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
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Abstract

While eukaryotic noncoding RNAs have recently received intense scrutiny, it is becoming clear that bacterial transcription is at least as pervasive. Bacterial small RNAs and antisense RNAs (sRNAs) are often assumed to be noncoding, due to their lack of long open reading frames (ORFs). However, there are numerous examples of sRNAs encoding for small proteins, whether or not they also have a regulatory role at the RNA level. Here, we apply flexible machine learning techniques based on sequence features and comparative genomics to quantify the prevalence of sRNA ORFs under natural selection to maintain protein-coding function in phylogenetically diverse bacteria. A majority of annotated sRNAs have at least one ORF between 10 and 50 amino acids long, and we conservatively predict that 188±25.5 unannotated sRNA ORFs are under selection to maintain coding, an average of 13 per species considered here. This implies that overall at least 7.5 ±0.3% of sRNAs have a coding ORF, and in some species at least 20% do. 84 ± 9.8 of these novel coding ORFs have some antisense overlap to annotated ORFs. As experimental validation, many of our predictions are translated according to ribosome profiling data and are identified via mass spectrometry shotgun proteomics. B. subtilis sRNAs with coding ORFs are enriched for high expression in biofilms and confluent growth, and two S. pneumoniae sRNAs with coding ORFs are involved in virulence. sRNA coding ORFs are enriched for transmembrane domains and many are novel components of type I toxin/antitoxin systems. Our predictions for sRNA coding ORFs, including novel type I toxins, are freely available in a user-friendly format at http://disco-bac.web.pasteur.fr.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 04, 2015.
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Common and phylogenetically widespread coding for peptides by bacterial small RNAs
Robin C. Friedman, Stefan Kalkhof, Olivia Doppelt-Azeroual, Stephan Mueller, Martiná Chovancová, Martin von Bergen, Benno Schwikowski
bioRxiv 030619; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/030619
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Common and phylogenetically widespread coding for peptides by bacterial small RNAs
Robin C. Friedman, Stefan Kalkhof, Olivia Doppelt-Azeroual, Stephan Mueller, Martiná Chovancová, Martin von Bergen, Benno Schwikowski
bioRxiv 030619; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/030619

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