Protein & Peptide Letters

Author(s): Yonghong Zhang, Changjie Bao, Lijun Shen, Chunjie Tian, Xueli Zang, Guang Chen* and Sitong Zhang*

DOI: 10.2174/0929866528666211118084519

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Microbial Cold Shock Proteins: Overview of their Function and Mechanism of Action

Page: [133 - 142] Pages: 10

  • * (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

The organism responds to a decrease in temperature by producing a series of cold shock proteins (CSPs). These proteins play a critical role in growing and functioning characteristics at low temperatures. CSPs have been discovered in a wide range of organisms and have shown enormous diversity; their mechanisms of action are also complicated. Transcription and translation in microorganisms typically occur via a single linear chain, but upon exposure to low temperatures, RNA forms a complex secondary structure that prevents ribosomes from binding to it, thus slowing down translation. CSPs bind to mRNA as RNA molecular chaperones to keep the mRNA secondary structure in a single-stranded linear conformation, allowing successful translation at low temperatures.

Keywords: Cold shock protein, transcription, translation, csp mRNA, 5¢-UTR, RNA chaperone.