“…The majority of bacterial sRNAs so far identified are encoded within IGRs and are independently transcribed (Vogel et al ., 2003; Kawano et al ., 2005; Loh et al ., 2009; Chao et al ., 2012; Chao and Vogel, 2016; Dar and Sorek 2018). Nevertheless, a few 3′‐UTR‐derived sRNAs (Kawano et al ., 2005; Kim et al ., 2014; Chao and Vogel, 2016; Chao et al ., 2017; Eisenhardt et al ., 2018; Miyakoshi et al ., 2019), 5′‐UTR‐derived sRNAs (Kawano et al ., 2005; Drecktrah et al ., 2018), and protein coding region‐derived sRNAs (called decay‐generated noncoding RNAs [decRNAs]) (Dar and Sorek, 2018) have been reported in different bacterial species. Surprisingly, our study demonstrated that, in Xcc, mRNA processing is the primary source of cellular sRNA, suggesting a close link between sRNA biogenesis and mRNA decay.…”