Programmed cell death by hok/sok
of plasmid R1 and pnd/pndB of R483 mediates
plasmid maintenance by killing of plasmid-free cells. It
has been previously suggested that premature translation
of the plasmid-mediated toxin is prevented during transcription
of the hok and pnd mRNAs by the formation
of metastable hairpins in the mRNA at the 5′ end.
Here, experimental evidence is presented for the existence
of metastable structures in the 5′ leader of the
hok and pnd mRNAs in vitro. The kinetics
of refolding from the metastable to the stable structure
in the isolated fragments of the 5′ ends of both
the hok and pnd mRNAs could be estimated,
in agreement with the structural rearrangement in this
region, as predicted to occur during transcription and
mRNA activation. The refolding rates of hok and
pnd structures are slow enough to allow for the
formation of downstream hairpin structures during elongation
of the mRNAs, which thereby helps to stabilize the metastable
structures. Thus, the kinetic refolding parameters of the
hok and pnd mRNAs are consistent with
the proposal that the metastable structures prevent premature
translation and/or antisense RNA binding during transcription.