Eubacterial tmRNAs (10Sa RNAs) are unique because
they function, at least in Escherichia coli, both
as tRNA and mRNA (for a review, see Muto et al., 1998).
These ∼360 ± 40-nt-long RNAs are charged with
alanine at their 3′ ends by alanyl-tRNA synthetases
or AlaRS (Komine et al., 1994; Ushida et al., 1994). Alanylation
occurs thanks to the presence of the equivalent of the
G3-U70 pair, the major identity element
for the alanylation of canonical tRNAs (Hou & Schimmel,
1988; McClain & Foss, 1988). Bacterial tmRNAs also
have a short reading frame coding for 9 to 27 amino acids,
depending on the species. E. coli tmRNA mediates
recycling of ribosomes stalled at the end of terminatorless
mRNAs, via a trans-translation process (Tu et
al., 1995; Keiler et al., 1996; Himeno et al., 1997; Withey
& Friedman, 1999). In E. coli, this amino
acid tag is cotranslationally added to polypeptides synthesized
from mRNAs lacking a termination codon, and the added 11-amino-acid
C-terminal tag makes the protein a target for specific
proteolysis (Keiler et al., 1996).