Polyadenylation controls mRNA stability in procaryotes,
eucaryotes, and organelles. In bacteria, oligo(A) tails
synthesized by poly(A) polymerase I are the targets of
the 3′-to-5′ exoribonucleases: polynucleotide
phosphorylase and RNase II. Here we show that RNase II
very efficiently removes the oligo(A) tails that can be
used as binding sites by PNPase to start degradation of
the rpsO mRNA. Both enzymes are impeded by the
secondary structure of the transcription terminator at
the 3′ end of the mRNA. RNase II mostly generates
tailless transcripts harboring 2 unpaired nt downstream
of the transcription terminator hairpin, whereas PNPase
releases molecules that exhibit a single-stranded stretch
of 5–7 nt terminated by a tail of 3–5 As. The
rpsO mRNAs whose oligo(A) tails have been removed
by RNase II are more stable than oligoadenylated molecules
that occur in strains deficient for RNase II. Moreover,
the rpsO mRNA is stabilized when RNase II is overproduced.
This modulation of mRNA stability by RNase II is only observed
when poly(A) polymerase I is active. These in vivo data
demonstrate that RNase II protects mRNAs ending by stable
terminal hairpins, such as primary transcripts, from degradation
by poly(A)-dependent ribonucleases.