RNase G is a homologue of the essential Escherichia coli ribonuclease RNase E. Whereas RNase E plays a key role in the degradation of mRNA and the processing of tRNA and rRNA in E. coli, the biological functions of RNase G appear more limited. We report here that this difference in function is not merely a consequence of the significantly lower cellular concentration of RNase G, but also reflects differences in the intrinsic properties of these ribonucleases, as overproducing wild-type RNase G at a level up to 20 times the usual cellular concentration of RNase E cannot normally compensate for the absence of RNase E in E. coli. Instead, RNase G can sustain significant growth of RNase E-deficient E. coli cells only when it bears an unnatural extension at its amino terminus (e.g. MRKGINM) or carboxyl terminus (e.g. GHHHHHH). These extensions presumably enable RNase G to cleave critically important cellular RNAs whose efficient processing or degradation ordinarily requires RNase E. That extending the amino terminus of RNase G restores growth to E. coli cells lacking RNase E without detectably improving tRNA processing suggests that RNase E is not essential for tRNA production and is required for cell growth because it plays an indispensable role in the maturation or decay of essential E. coli RNAs other than tRNA.