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Dive into the research topics where Eric Massé is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Massé.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A small RNA regulates the expression of genes involved in iron metabolism in Escherichia coli

Eric Massé; Susan Gottesman

A small RNA, RyhB, was found as part of a genomewide search for novel small RNAs in Escherichia coli. The RyhB 90-nt RNA down-regulates a set of iron-storage and iron-using proteins when iron is limiting; it is itself negatively regulated by the ferric uptake repressor protein, Fur (Ferric uptake regulator). RyhB RNA levels are inversely correlated with mRNA levels for the sdhCDAB operon, encoding succinate dehydrogenase, as well as five other genes previously shown to be positively regulated by Fur by an unknown mechanism. These include two other genes encoding enzymes in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, acnA and fumA, two ferritin genes, ftnA and bfr, and a gene for superoxide dismutase, sodB. Fur positive regulation of all these genes is fully reversed in an ryhB mutant. Our results explain the previously observed inability of fur mutants to grow on succinate. RyhB requires the RNA-binding protein, Hfq, for activity. Sequences within RyhB are complementary to regions within each of the target genes, suggesting that RyhB acts as an antisense RNA. In sdhCDAB, the complementary region is at the end of the first gene of the sdhCDAB operon; full-length sdhCDAB message disappears and a truncated message, equivalent in size to the region upstream of the complementarity, is detected when RyhB is expressed. RyhB provides a mechanism for the cell to down-regulate iron-storage proteins and nonessential ironcontaining proteins when iron is limiting, thus modulating intracellular iron usage to supplement mechanisms for iron uptake directly regulated by Fur.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

The small RNA RyhB activates the translation of shiA mRNA encoding a permease of shikimate, a compound involved in siderophore synthesis.

Karine Prévost; Hubert Salvail; Guillaume Desnoyers; Jean-François Jacques; Émilie Phaneuf; Eric Massé

RyhB is a small RNA (sRNA) that downregulates about 20 genes involved in iron metabolism. It is expressed under low iron conditions and pairs with specific mRNAs to trigger their rapid degradation by the RNA degradosome. In contrast to this, another study has suggested that RyhB also activates several genes by increasing their mRNA level. Among these activated genes is shiA, which encodes a permease of shikimate, an aromatic compound participating in the biosynthesis of siderophores. Here, we demonstrate in vivo and in vitro that RyhB directly pairs at the 5′‐untranslated region (5′‐UTR) of the shiA mRNA to disrupt an intrinsic inhibitory structure that sequesters the ribosome‐binding site (Shine‐Dalgarno) and the first translation codon. This is the first demonstration of direct gene activation by RyhB, which has been exclusively described in degradation of mRNAs. Our physiological results indicate that the transported compound of the ShiA permease, shikimate, is important under conditions of RyhB expression, that is, iron starvation. This is demonstrated by growth assays in which shikimate or the siderophore enterochelin correct the growth defect observed for a ryhB mutant in iron‐limited media.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Small RNA-induced differential degradation of the polycistronic mRNA iscRSUA

Guillaume Desnoyers; Audrey Morissette; Karine Prévost; Eric Massé

Most polycistronic genes are expressed in a single transcript, in which each cistron produces a fixed amount of protein. In this report, we show the first example of differential degradation of a polycistronic gene induced by a small regulatory RNA (sRNA). Our data show that the iron‐responsive sRNA, RyhB, binds to the second cistron of the polycistronic mRNA, iscRSUA, which encodes the necessary machinery for biosynthesis of Fe–S clusters, and promotes the cleavage of the downstream iscSUA transcript. This cleavage gives rise to the remaining 5′‐section of the transcript encoding IscR, a transcriptional regulator responsible for activation and repression of several genes depending on the cellular Fe–S level. Our data indicate that the iscR transcript is stable and that translation is active. The stability of the iscR transcript depends on a 111‐nucleotide long non‐translated RNA section located between iscR and iscS, which forms a strong repetitive extragenic palindromic secondary structure and may protect against ribonucleases degradation. This novel regulation shows how sRNAs and mRNA structures can work together to modulate the transcriptional response to a specific stress.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Comparative Study between Transcriptionally- and Translationally-Acting Adenine Riboswitches Reveals Key Differences in Riboswitch Regulatory Mechanisms

Jean-François Lemay; Guillaume Desnoyers; Simon Blouin; Benoit Heppell; Laurène Bastet; Patrick St-Pierre; Eric Massé; Daniel A. Lafontaine

Many bacterial mRNAs are regulated at the transcriptional or translational level by ligand-binding elements called riboswitches. Although they both bind adenine, the adenine riboswitches of Bacillus subtilis and Vibrio vulnificus differ by controlling transcription and translation, respectively. Here, we demonstrate that, beyond the obvious difference in transcriptional and translational modulation, both adenine riboswitches exhibit different ligand binding properties and appear to operate under different regulation regimes (kinetic versus thermodynamic). While the B. subtilis pbuE riboswitch fully depends on co-transcriptional binding of adenine to function, the V. vulnificus add riboswitch can bind to adenine after transcription is completed and still perform translation regulation. Further investigation demonstrates that the rate of transcription is critical for the B. subtilis pbuE riboswitch to perform efficiently, which is in agreement with a co-transcriptional regulation. Our results suggest that the nature of gene regulation control, that is transcription or translation, may have a high importance in riboswitch regulatory mechanisms.


Genes & Development | 2011

Small RNA-induced mRNA degradation achieved through both translation block and activated cleavage

Karine Prévost; Guillaume Desnoyers; Jean-Francxois Jacques; Francxois Lavoie; Eric Massé

Small RNA (sRNA)-induced mRNA degradation occurs through binding of an sRNA to a target mRNA with the concomitant action of the RNA degradosome, which induces an endoribonuclease E (RNase E)-dependent cleavage and degradation of the targeted mRNA. Because many sRNAs bind at the ribosome-binding site (RBS), it is possible that the resulting translation block is sufficient to promote the rapid degradation of the targeted mRNA. Contrary to this mechanism, we report here that the pairing of the sRNA RyhB to the target mRNA sodB initiates mRNA degradation even in the absence of translation on the mRNA target. Remarkably, even though it pairs at the RBS, the sRNA RyhB induces mRNA cleavage in vivo at a distal site located >350 nucleotides (nt) downstream from the RBS, ruling out local cleavage near the pairing site. Both the RNA chaperone Hfq and the RNA degradosome are required for efficient cleavage at the distal site. Thus, beyond translation initiation block, sRNA-induced mRNA cleavage requires several unexpected steps, many of which are determined by structural features of the target mRNA.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

RyhB small RNA modulates the free intracellular iron pool and is essential for normal growth during iron limitation in Escherichia coli

Jean François Jacques; Soojin Jang; Karine Prévost; Guillaume Desnoyers; Maxime Desmarais; James A. Imlay; Eric Massé

The small RNA RyhB has recently been shown to negatively regulate a number of mRNAs encoding dispensable iron‐using proteins in Escherichia coli. The resulting decrease in the synthesis of iron‐using proteins is thought to spare iron in order to ensure its availability for iron‐requiring proteins that are indispensable. Indeed, the expression of RyhB from a heterologous promoter activates the iron‐sensing repressor Fur, which suggests an increase in the pool of free intracellular iron (iron‐sparing). In accordance with these observations, we report here that RyhB expression increases the concentration of free intracellular iron, as shown by direct measurements of the metal in whole cells by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Our data also suggest that iron‐sparing originates from rapid uptake of extracellular iron and not from already internalized metal. Furthermore, RyhB is shown to be essential for normal bacterial growth and survival during iron starvation, which is consistent with previous data describing the function of the small RNA. Overall, our data demonstrate that, by regulating synthesis of nonessential iron‐using proteins, the small RNA RyhB ensures that the iron is directed towards the iron‐requiring enzymes that are indispensable.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I inhibits R-loop formation by relaxing transcription-induced negative supercoiling.

Eric Massé; Marc Drolet

It has recently been shown that RNase H overproduction can partially compensate for the growth defect due to the absence of DNA topoisomerase I in Escherichia coli(Drolet, M., Phoenix, P., Menzel, R., Massé, E., Liu, L. F., and Crouch, R. J. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 92, 3526–3530). This result has suggested a model in which inhibitory R-loops occur during transcription in topAmutants. Results presented in this report further support this notion and demonstrate that transcription-induced supercoiling is involved in R-loop formation. First, we show that stable R-loop formation duringin vitro transcription with E. coli RNA polymerase only occurs in the presence of DNA gyrase. Second, extensive R-loop formation in vivo, revealed by the production of RNase H-sensitive hypernegatively supercoiled plasmid DNAs, is observed under conditions where topA mutants fail to grow. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that the coupling of transcription and translation in bacteria is an efficient way of preventing R-loop formation.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Regulatory RNAs and target mRNA decay in prokaryotes.

David Lalaouna; Maxime Simoneau-Roy; Daniel A. Lafontaine; Eric Massé

Recent advances in prokaryote genetics have highlighted the important and complex roles of small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs). Although blocking mRNA translation is often the main function of sRNAs, these molecules can also induce the degradation of target mRNAs using a mechanism that drastically differs from eukaryotic RNA interference (RNAi). Whereas RNAi relies on RNase III-like machinery that is specific to double-strand RNAs, sRNA-mediated mRNA degradation in Escherichia coli and Samonella typhimurium depends on RNase E, a single-strand specific endoribonuclease. Surprisingly, the latest descriptions of sRNA-mediated mRNA degradation in various bacteria suggest a variety of previously unsuspected mechanisms. In this review, we focus on recently characterized mechanisms in which sRNAs can bind to target mRNAs to induce decay. These new mechanisms illustrate how sRNAs and mRNA structures, including riboswitches, act cooperatively with protein partners to initiate the decay of mRNAs. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: RNA Decay mechanisms.


Genes & Development | 2012

Noncanonical repression of translation initiation through small RNA recruitment of the RNA chaperone Hfq

Guillaume Desnoyers; Eric Massé

The RNA chaperone Hfq is mostly known to help small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) interact with target mRNAs to block initiating ribosomes. In this model, whereas the sRNA is directly competing with initiating 30S ribosomal subunits, Hfq plays only an indirect role, allowing optimal sRNA-mRNA pairing. Here we report that Hfq is recruited by a sRNA, Spot42, to bind to a precise AU-rich region in the vicinity of the translation initiation region (TIR) of sdhC mRNA and competes directly with 30S ribosomal subunits. We show that the sRNA Spot42 binds sdhC too far upstream of the TIR to directly repress translation initiation in vitro and in vivo. Contrary to the canonical model of sRNA regulation, this suggests a new mechanism where Hfq is directly involved in the translational repression of the target mRNA and where the sRNA acts only as a recruitment factor.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Dual-acting riboswitch control of translation initiation and mRNA decay

Laurène Bastet; Antony Lussier; Maxime Simoneau-Roy; Eric Massé; Daniel A. Lafontaine

Riboswitches are mRNA regulatory elements that control gene expression by altering their structure in response to specific metabolite binding. In bacteria, riboswitches consist of an aptamer that performs ligand recognition and an expression platform that regulates either transcription termination or translation initiation. Here, we describe a dual-acting riboswitch from Escherichia coli that, in addition to modulating translation initiation, also is directly involved in the control of initial mRNA decay. Upon lysine binding, the lysC riboswitch adopts a conformation that not only inhibits translation initiation but also exposes RNase E cleavage sites located in the riboswitch expression platform. However, in the absence of lysine, the riboswitch folds into an alternative conformation that simultaneously allows translation initiation and sequesters RNase E cleavage sites. Both regulatory activities can be individually inhibited, indicating that translation initiation and mRNA decay can be modulated independently using the same conformational switch. Because RNase E cleavage sites are located in the riboswitch sequence, this riboswitch provides a unique means for the riboswitch to modulate RNase E cleavage activity directly as a function of lysine. This dual inhibition is in contrast to other riboswitches, such as the thiamin pyrophosphate-sensing thiM riboswitch, which triggers mRNA decay only as a consequence of translation inhibition. The riboswitch control of RNase E cleavage activity is an example of a mechanism by which metabolite sensing is used to regulate gene expression of single genes or even large polycistronic mRNAs as a function of environmental changes.

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David Lalaouna

Université de Sherbrooke

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Karine Prévost

Université de Sherbrooke

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Marc Drolet

Université de Montréal

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Hubert Salvail

Université de Sherbrooke

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Laurène Bastet

Université de Sherbrooke

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