TY - JOUR
T1 - TATA-binding Protein-associated Factors Enhance the Recruitment of RNA Polymerase II by Transcriptional Activators
AU - Wu, Shwu Yuan
AU - Chiang, Cheng Ming
PY - 2001/9/7
Y1 - 2001/9/7
N2 - Transcription factor (TF) IID, comprised of the TATA-binding protein (TBP) and TBP-associated factors (TAFs), is a general transcription factor required for RNA polymerase II (pol II) transcription on most eukaryotic genes. Recent findings that TAFs may not be globally required for activator-dependent transcription in vivo and in vitro and that both TAF-dependent and TAF-independent promoters are found in yeast suggest that transcriptional activation can occur through at least two different pathways, depending on the presence or absence of TAFs. Using order-of-addition and template challenge assays performed in a human cell-free transcription system reconstituted with recombinant general transcription factors (TFIIB, TBP, TFIIE, TFIIF), a recombinant general cofactor (PC4), and highly purified epitope-tagged multiprotein complexes (TFIID, TFIIH, pol II), we demonstrate that when TBP is used as the TATA-binding factor transcriptional activators such as Gal4-VP16 and human papillomavirus E2 mainly function by facilitating pol II entry to the promoter region. In contrast, when TFIID is used as the TATA-binding factor, promoter recognition by TFIID appears to be the rate-limiting step facilitated by transcriptional activators during preinitiation complex assembly. Using protein-protein pull-down and far-Western analyses, we further show that the presence of TAFs in TFIID facilitates the recruitment of pol II by transcriptional activators, thereby switching the rate-limiting step from pol II entry to promoter recognition. Our findings thus provide distinct molecular mechanisms for TAF-independent and TAF-dependent activation.
AB - Transcription factor (TF) IID, comprised of the TATA-binding protein (TBP) and TBP-associated factors (TAFs), is a general transcription factor required for RNA polymerase II (pol II) transcription on most eukaryotic genes. Recent findings that TAFs may not be globally required for activator-dependent transcription in vivo and in vitro and that both TAF-dependent and TAF-independent promoters are found in yeast suggest that transcriptional activation can occur through at least two different pathways, depending on the presence or absence of TAFs. Using order-of-addition and template challenge assays performed in a human cell-free transcription system reconstituted with recombinant general transcription factors (TFIIB, TBP, TFIIE, TFIIF), a recombinant general cofactor (PC4), and highly purified epitope-tagged multiprotein complexes (TFIID, TFIIH, pol II), we demonstrate that when TBP is used as the TATA-binding factor transcriptional activators such as Gal4-VP16 and human papillomavirus E2 mainly function by facilitating pol II entry to the promoter region. In contrast, when TFIID is used as the TATA-binding factor, promoter recognition by TFIID appears to be the rate-limiting step facilitated by transcriptional activators during preinitiation complex assembly. Using protein-protein pull-down and far-Western analyses, we further show that the presence of TAFs in TFIID facilitates the recruitment of pol II by transcriptional activators, thereby switching the rate-limiting step from pol II entry to promoter recognition. Our findings thus provide distinct molecular mechanisms for TAF-independent and TAF-dependent activation.
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U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M102463200
DO - 10.1074/jbc.M102463200
M3 - Article
C2 - 11457828
AN - SCOPUS:0035823599
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 276
SP - 34235
EP - 34243
JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 36
ER -