RNAIII, a 514-nt RNA molecule, regulates the expression
of many Staphylococcus aureus genes encoding exoproteins
and cell-wall-associated proteins. We have studied the
structure of RNAIII in solution, using a combination of
chemical and enzymatic probes. A model of the secondary
structure was derived from experimental data with the help
of computer simulation of RNA folding. The model contains
14 hairpin structures connected by unpaired nucleotides.
The data also point to three helices formed by distant
nucleotides that close off structural domains. This model
was generally compatible with the results of in vivo probing
experiments with dimethylsulfate in late exponential-phase
cultures. Toe-printing experiments revealed that the ribosome
binding site of hld, which is encoded by RNAIII,
was accessible to the Escherichia coli 30S ribosomal
subunit, suggesting that the in vitro structure represented
a translatable form of RNAIII. We also found that, within
the 3′ end of RNAIII, the conserved hairpin 13 and
the terminator form an intrinsic structural domain that
exerts specific regulatory activity on protein A gene expression.