Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.7.6 (RNA polymerase)
34,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cyclin T1 has been identified recently as a regulatory subunit of CDK9 and as a component of the transcription elongation factor P-TEFb. Cyclin T1/CDK9 complexes phosphorylate the carboxy terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) in vitro. Here we report that the levels of cyclin T1 are dramatically upregulated by two independent signaling pathways triggered respectively by PMA and PHA in primary human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs). Activation of these two pathways in tandem is sufficient for PBLs to enter and progress through the cell cycle. However, the expression of cyclin T1 is not growth and/or cell cycle regulated in other cell types, indicating that regulation of cyclin T1 expression is dependent on tissue-specific signaling pathways. Upregulation of cyclin T1 in stimulated PBLs results in induction of the CTD kinase activity of the cyclin T1/CDK9 complex, which in turn correlates directly with phosphorylation of RNAP II in vivo, linking for the first time activation of the cyclin T1/ CDK9 pair with phosphorylation of RNAP II in vivo. In addition, we report here that endogenous CDK9 and cyclin T1 complexes associate with HIV-1 generated Tat in relevant cells and under physiological conditions (HIV-1 infected T cells). This, together with our results showing that HIV-1 replication in stimulated PBLs correlates with the levels of cyclin T1 protein and associated CTD kinase activity, suggests that the cyclin T1/CDK9 pair is one of the HIV-1 required host cellular cofactors generated during T cell activation.
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PMID:Upregulation of cyclin T1/CDK9 complexes during T cell activation. 987 25

Tat activates transcription from the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) long terminal repeat (LTR) by increasing the processivity of RNA polymerase II. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the cellular kinase CDK9 and its binding partner cyclin T1 are involved in regulating transcriptional elongation and tat-activation. Cyclin T1, CDK9 and Tat bind as a complex to elements in TAR RNA that are required for tat-activation. Here, we used cyclin T1 mutants to define domains in this protein that bind to both CDK9 and Tat and are involved in stimulating tat-activation. The region of cyclin T1 extending from amino acid residues 1 to 263 is necessary for complex formation with Tat bound to TAR RNA and for stimulation of tat-activation in murine cells that are normally poorly responsive to the actions of Tat. In contrast, a smaller region of cyclin T1 was required to bind to CDK9 and stimulate its kinase activity. Recombinant cyclin T1 and CDK9 stimulated both basal and tat-induced in vitro transcriptional elongation from the HIV-1 LTR. The effects of Tat on transcriptional elongation may be mediated by its ability to increase CDK9 phosphorylation of the RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain. These results demonstrate that cyclin T1 interactions with Tat and TAR RNA are critical for activation of HIV-1 gene expression.
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PMID:Cyclin T1 domains involved in complex formation with Tat and TAR RNA are critical for tat-activation. 1032 25

The CDK9 kinase in association with Cyclin T is a component of the transcription positive-acting complex pTEFb which facilitates the transition from abortive to productive transcription elongation by phosphorylating the carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II. The Cyclin T1/CDK9 complex is implicated in Tat transactivation, and it has been suggested that Tat functions by recruiting this complex to RNAPII through cooperative binding to RNA. Here, we demonstrate that targeted recruitment of Cyclin T1/CDK9 kinase complex to specific promoters, through fusion to a DNA-binding domain of either Cyclin T1 or CDK9 kinase, stimulates transcription in vivo. Transcriptional enhancement was dependent on active CDK9, as a catalytically inactive form had no transcriptional effect. We determined that, unlike conventional activators, DNA-bound CDK9 does not activate enhancerless TATA-promoters unless TBP is overexpressed, suggesting that CDK9 acts in vivo at a step subsequent to TFIID recruitment DNA-bound. Finally, we determined that CDK9-mediated transcriptional activation is mediated by preferentially stimulating productive transcription elongation.
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PMID:Transcriptional regulation by targeted recruitment of cyclin-dependent CDK9 kinase in vivo. 1046 4

Human immunodeficiency virus-1 Tat protein and human Cyclin T1 mediate transcriptional activation by enhancing the elongation efficiency of RNA polymerase II. Activation of transcription of the related equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) requires a similar protein known as eTat, which does not function in human cells. Expression of equine Cyclin T1 in human cells rescues eTat function, suggesting a general mechanism of transcription activation among lentiviruses. Here we present the cloning of Cyclin T1 from canine D17 osteosarcoma cells, which support EIAV transactivation, and show that canine Cyclin T1 confers eTat transactivation to human cells. A two-amino-acid change, from 79-proline-glycine-80 to 79-histidine-arginine-80, confers on the human Cyclin T1 the ability to cooperate with eTat in transcriptional activation. These findings suggested that the regions of Cyclin T1 that interact with lentiviral Tat proteins and TAR RNA elements form an extended domain, which very likely has a conserved fold.
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PMID:Canine cyclin T1 rescues equine infectious anemia virus tat trans-activation in human cells. 1068 21

Cyclin T1 (CycT1) is a regulatory subunit of a general RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) elongation factor termed P-TEFb. The human immunodeficiency virus Tat protein directly associates with CycT1 to utilize CycT1/P-TEFb (also called TAK) for activation of RNAP II elongation of the integrated proviral genome. CycT1 mRNA and protein levels are induced in activated human peripheral blood lymphocytes and CycT1 protein levels are induced by a post-transcriptional mechanism when human U937 promonocytic cells are stimulated to differentiate into macrophage-like cells. To investigate mechanisms that regulate CycT1 RNA expression, we isolated the CycT1 promoter. Multiple transcription start sites were identified within 330 nucleotides upstream of the ATG initiation codon at +1. The CycT1 promoter lacks a TATA element and possesses high constitutive activity in plasmid transfection assays. Two distinct regions of the promoter were identified upstream of +1 that contain critical regulatory elements for CycT1 promoter function.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the human cyclin T1 promoter. 1090 36

Cyclin T1, together with the kinase CDK9, is a component of the transcription elongation factor P-TEFb which binds the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transactivator Tat. P-TEFb facilitates transcription by phosphorylating the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II. Cyclin T1 is an exceptionally large cyclin and is therefore a candidate for interactions with regulatory proteins. We identified granulin as a cyclin T1-interacting protein that represses expression from the HIV-1 promoter in transfected cells. The granulins, mitogenic growth factors containing repeats of a cysteine-rich motif, were reported previously to interact with Tat. We show that granulin formed stable complexes in vivo and in vitro with cyclin T1 and Tat. Granulin bound to the histidine-rich domain of cyclin T1, which was recently found to bind to the CTD, but not to cyclin T2. Binding of granulin to P-TEFb inhibited the phosphorylation of a CTD peptide. Granulin expression inhibited Tat transactivation, and tethering experiments showed that this effect was due, at least in part, to a direct action on cyclin T1 in the absence of Tat. In addition, granulin was a substrate for CDK9 but not for the other transcription-related kinases CDK7 and CDK8. Thus, granulin is a cellular protein that interacts with cyclin T1 to inhibit transcription.
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PMID:The growth factor granulin interacts with cyclin T1 and modulates P-TEFb-dependent transcription. 1258 88

The oligomerization chain reaction (OCR) strategy is a recently described technique for inactivation of target proteins that function as homoassociate complexes. This novel strategy is based on the fusion of self-associating coiled-coil (CC) domain of the nuclear factor promyelocytic leukemia (PML) to target proteins. Here, we present the successful application of the OCR strategy for inactivation of the heterodimeric Cdk9/cyclin T1 complex. Cyclin T1/Cdk9 (P-TEFb) complex is a positive regulator of gene transcription, whose function is underlined by the ability to phosphorylate the carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD) of the RNA polymerase II conferring productive transcript elongation. Fusion of the CC domain to Cdk9 leads to the formation of high molecular complexes to which the endogenous cyclin T1 is recruited. The CC-Cdk9 chimera effectively inhibits HIV-1 Tat activation, whose transcription activity is exquisitely dependent upon cyclin T1/Cdk9 function. Furthermore, expression of CC-Cdk9 protein inhibits cell proliferation, as shown by colony-formation assay. Collectively, our findings add further support to the OCR strategy for functional inactivation of hetero-associated factors such as the Cdk9/cyclin T1 complex, and highlight a putative function of Cdk9 in cell growth control.
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PMID:Functional inactivation of Cdk9 through oligomerization chain reaction. 1289 30

Cyclin T1 (CycT1) is a cellular transcription elongation factor that also participates in Tat-mediated activation of several lentiviral promoters. In human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), CycT1 is required for Tat to bind tightly to TAR and interacts in the ternary complex via its Tat-TAR recognition motif (TRM). In the related bovine immunodeficiency virus (BIV), Tat recognizes its cognate TAR element with high affinity and specificity in the absence of CycT1. At both promoters, CycT1 recruits the Cdk9 kinase, which phosphorylates RNA polymerase II to generate processive transcription complexes. To examine the physical properties of CycT1, we purified a functional domain corresponding to residues 1-272 and found that it possesses a stably folded core, as judged by partial proteolysis and circular dichroism experiments. Interestingly, the C-terminal 20 residues corresponding to the TRM appear conformationally flexible or disordered. The TRM of the bovine CycT1 (bCycT1) is similarly sensitive to proteolysis yet differs in sequence from the human protein. In particular, bCycT1 lacks a cysteine at residue 261 known to be critical for HIV but not BIV ternary complex formation, and mutagenesis data are consistent with a proposed role for this cysteine in metal binding. The apparent flexibility of the TRM suggests that conformational rearrangements may accompany formation of CycT1-Tat-TAR ternary complexes and may contribute to different TAR recognition strategies in different lentiviruses.
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PMID:Evidence for conformational flexibility in the Tat-TAR recognition motif of cyclin T1. 1497 56

The tumor suppressor gene product BRCA1 is a component of the RNA polymerase II (pol II) holoenzyme that is involved, through binding to various regulatory proteins, in either activation or repression of transcription. Using a yeast two-hybrid screen, we have identified a human zinc-finger-containing protein NUFIP that interacts with BRCA1. The ubiquitous, stably expressed, nuclear protein NUFIP specifically stimulates activator-independent pol II transcription in vitro and in vivo. Immunodepletion of the endogenous NUFIP causes a marked decrease of pol II transcription, which is then shown to be restored by stable complex of ectopically produced NUFIP and associated factors. NUFIP not only interacts with BRCA1 but also associates with the positive elongation factor P-TEFb through interaction with the regulatory Cyclin T1 subunit. Cyclin T1 is required for BRCA1- and NUFIP-dependent synergistic activation of pol II transcription in 293 cells. Mutation of the zinc-finger domain abolishes the NUFIP-mediated transcriptional activation. We show that NUFIP is associated with preinitiation complexes, open transcription complexes, and elongation complexes. In addition, NUFIP facilitates ATP-dependent dissociation of hyperphosphorylated pol II from open transcription complexes in vitro.
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PMID:BRCA1 cooperates with NUFIP and P-TEFb to activate transcription by RNA polymerase II. 1510 25

The macrophage is an important cell type in the pathophysiology of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Macrophages both support viral replication and are capable of attracting and activating lymphocytes, thus rendering CD4+ T lymphocytes highly permissive for infection. The viral Tat protein, whose function is mediated by the cellular cyclin T1 protein complexed with CDK9, is required for efficient transcription of the integrated HIV-1 provirus by RNA polymerase II. Cyclin T1 expression is highly regulated during macrophage differentiation, and this has important implications for HIV-1 replication. In monocytes isolated from healthy blood donors, cyclin T1 protein expression is low and is induced to high levels within the first few days of differentiation by a post-transcriptional mechanism. After 1-2 weeks of macrophage differentiation, however, cyclin T1 expression is shut off. Treatment of macrophages with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can re-induce cyclin T1, indicating that the activation status of macrophages can regulate cyclin T1 expression. Recent results indicate that HIV-1 infection is able to induce cyclin T1 expression in macrophages. Future studies of cyclin T1 regulation in macrophages may suggest means of manipulating expression of this crucial cellular co-factor for therapeutic benefit in HIV-1 infected individuals.
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PMID:HIV-1 infection and regulation of Tat function in macrophages. 1518 43


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