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Query: EC:2.7.7.6 (
RNA polymerase
)
34,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The transcription/DNA repair factor
TFIIH
consists of nine subunits, several exhibiting known functions: helicase/ATPase, kinase activity and DNA binding. Three subunits of
TFIIH
, cdk7, cyclin H and MAT1, form a ternary complex, cdk-activating kinase (CAK), found either on its own or as part of
TFIIH
. In the present work, we demonstrate that purified human CAK complex (free CAK) and recombinant CAK (rCAK) produced in insect cells exhibit a strong preference for the cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (cdk2) over a ctd oligopeptide substrate (which mimics the carboxy-terminal domain of the
RNA polymerase II
). In contrast,
TFIIH
preferentially phosphorylates the ctd as well as TFIIE alpha, but not cdk2.
TFIIH
was resolved into four subcomplexes: the kinase complex composed of cdk7, cyclin H and MAT1; the core
TFIIH
which contains XPB, p62, p52, p44 and p34; and two other subcomplexes in which XPD is found associated with either the kinase complex or with the core
TFIIH
. Using these fractions, we demonstrate that
TFIIH
lacking the CAK subcomplex completely recovers its transcriptional activity in the presence of free CAK. Furthermore, studies examining the interactions between
TFIIH
subunits provide evidence that CAK is integrated within
TFIIH
via XPB and XPD.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of the cdk-activating kinase (CAK) is altered upon association with TFIIH. 913 Jul 8
The cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)-activating kinase CAK has been proposed to function in the control of cell cycle progression, DNA repair and
RNA polymerase II
(pol II) transcription. Most CAK exists as complexes of three subunits: CDK7, cyclin H (CycH) and MAT1. This tripartite CAK occurs in a free form and in association with 'core'
TFIIH
, which functions in both pol II transcription and DNA repair. We investigated the substrate specificities of different forms of CAK. Addition of the MAT1 subunit to recombinant bipartite CDK7-CycH switched its substrate preference to favour the pol II large subunit C-terminal domain (CTD) over CDK2. We suggest that the MAT1 protein, previously shown to function as an assembly factor for CDK7-CycH, also acts to modulate CAK substrate specificity. The substrate specificities of natural
TFIIH
and free CAK were also compared.
TFIIH
had a strong preference for the CTD over CDK2 relative to free CAK.
TFIIH
, but not free CAK, could efficiently hyperphosphorylate the CTD. In the context of
TFIIH
, the kinase also acquired specificity for the general transcription factors TFIIE and TFIIF which were not recognized by free CAK. We conclude that the substrate preference of the CDK7-CycH kinase is governed by association with both MAT1 and 'core'
TFIIH
.
...
PMID:Regulation of CDK7 substrate specificity by MAT1 and TFIIH. 913 Jul 9
The familial breast-ovarian tumor suppressor gene product BRCA1 was found to be a component of the
RNA polymerase II
holoenzyme by several criteria. BRCA1 was found to copurify with the holoenzyme over multiple chromatographic steps. Other tested transcription activators that could potentially contact the holoenzyme were not stably associated with the holoenzyme as determined by copurification. Antibody specific for the holoenzyme component hSRB7 specifically purifies BRCA1. Immunopurification of BRCA1 complexes also specifically purifies transcriptionally active
RNA polymerase II
and transcription factors TFIIF, TFIIE, and
TFIIH
. Moreover, a BRCA1 domain, which is deleted in about 90% of clinically relevant mutations, participates in binding to the holoenzyme complex in cells. These data are consistent with recent data identifying transcription activation domains in the BRCA1 protein and link the BRCA1 tumor suppressor protein with the transcription process as a holoenzyme-bound protein.
...
PMID:BRCA1 is a component of the RNA polymerase II holoenzyme. 915 19
The Tat protein is a transcriptional activator which is required for efficient human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) gene expression Tat stimulates HIV-1 transcriptional elongation by increasing the processivity of
RNA polymerase II
. To address whether Tat-mediated effects on HIV-1 gene expression are due to modulation in the phosphorylation of the
RNA polymerase II
C-terminal domain (CTD), we developed a purification protocol to identify cellular kinases that are capable of binding to Tat and hyperphosphorylating the
RNA polymerase II
CTD. A 600 kDa protein complex with these properties was isolated, and specific components were identified using peptide microsequence analysis. This analysis indicated that proteins comprising the multi-subunit
TFIIH
complex, in addition to several novel factors, were associated with Tat using both in vitro and in vivo analysis. The Tat-associated kinase bound to the activation domain of Tat, and its ability to hyperphosphorylate
RNA polymerase II
was markedly stimulated by Tat. Furthermore, the addition of the Tat-associated kinase to in vitro transcription assays stimulated the ability of Tat to activate HIV-1 transcription. These results define a cellular kinase complex whose activity is modulated by Tat to result in activation of HIV-1 trancription.
...
PMID:Purification of a Tat-associated kinase reveals a TFIIH complex that modulates HIV-1 transcription. 918 28
The molecular mechanism of transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair in eukaryotes is poorly understood. The identification of the dual role of basal transcription factor TFIIH in DNA repair and transcription provided a plausible link between both processes. However,
TFIIH
is not part of the elongating transcription complex, suggesting that additional components are required to recruit
TFIIH
when
RNA polymerase II
(RNAPII) stalls at the site of DNA damage. Previously, we have shown that the yeast Rad26 protein is involved in transcription-coupled DNA repair. This paper describes the differential contribution of the Rad26 protein to efficient removal of UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) from transcribed DNA. Two distinct regions within the transcribed strand of RNAPII-transcribed genes are identified that differ in their requirement for the RAD26 gene product. Using high-resolution repair analysis, we determined the in vivo repair kinetics of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers positioned around the transcription initiation site of RNAPII-transcribed genes RPB2 and URA3. Although transcription-coupled repair is severely reduced in rad26 mutants, lesions positioned in a small region immediately downstream of transcription initiation are efficiently removed in the absence of Rad26. The observed transition in repair characteristics is abrupt and in excellent agreement with the region where
TFIIH
dissociates from RNAPII in vitro, strongly suggesting an inverse correlation between
TFIIH
association and Rad26 requirement. These data suggest that a transcription repair coupling factor (Rad26/CSB) is required for efficient repair only during the elongating stages of RNAPII transcription.
...
PMID:Transitions in the coupling of transcription and nucleotide excision repair within RNA polymerase II-transcribed genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 922 8
With the availability of the general initiation factors (TFIIB, TFIID, TFIIE, TFIIF, and
TFIIH
), it is now possible to investigate aspects of the mechanism of eukaryotic messenger RNA synthesis in purified, reconstituted
RNA polymerase II
transcription systems. Rapid progress in these investigations has been spurred by use of a growing number of assays that are proving valuable not only for dissecting the molecular mechanisms of transcription initiation and elongation by
RNA polymerase II
, but also for identifying and purifying novel transcription factors that regulate polymerase activity. Here we describe a variety of these assays and discuss their utility in the analysis of transcription by
RNA polymerase II
.
...
PMID:Assays for investigating transcription by RNA polymerase II in vitro. 923 63
TFIIH
is a general transcription factor for
RNA polymerase II
that in addition is involved in DNA excision repair.
TFIIH
is composed of eight or nine subunits and we show that at least four of them, namely cdk7, cyclin H, MAT1, and p62 are localized in the coiled body, a distinct subnuclear structure that is transcription dependent and highly enriched in small nuclear ribonucleoproteins. Although coiled bodies do not correspond to sites of transcription, in vivo incorporation of bromo-UTP shows that they are surrounded by transcription foci. Immunofluorescence analysis using antibodies directed against the essential repair factors proliferating cell nuclear antigen and XPG did not reveal labeling of the coiled body in either untreated cells or cells irradiated with UV light, arguing that coiled bodies are probably not involved in DNA repair mechanisms. The localization of cyclin H in the coiled body was predominantly detected during the G1 and S-phases of the cell cycle, whereas in G2 coiled bodies were very small or not detected. Finally, both cyclin H and cdk7 did not colocalize with P80 coilin after disruption of the coiled body, indicating that these proteins are specifically targeted to the small nuclear ribonucleoprotein-containing domain.
...
PMID:The cdk7-cyclin H-MAT1 complex associated with TFIIH is localized in coiled bodies. 924 2
TFIIH
is a multifunctional
RNA polymerase II
transcription factor that possesses DNA-dependent ATPase, DNA helicase, and protein kinase activities. Previous studies have established that
TFIIH
enters the preinitiation complex and fulfills a critical role in initiation by catalyzing ATP-dependent formation of the open complex prior to synthesis of the first phosphodiester bond of nascent transcripts. In this report, we present direct evidence that
TFIIH
also controls
RNA polymerase II
activity at a postinitiation stage of transcription, by preventing premature arrest by very early elongation complexes just prior to their transition to stably elongating complexes. Unexpectedly, we observe that
TFIIH
is capable of entering the transcription cycle not only during assembly of the preinitiation complex but also after initiation and synthesis of as many as four to six phosphodiester bonds. These findings shed new light on the role of
TFIIH
in initiation and promoter escape and reveal an unanticipated flexibility in the ability of
TFIIH
to interact with
RNA polymerase II
transcription intermediates prior to, during, and immediately after initiation.
...
PMID:A role for TFIIH in controlling the activity of early RNA polymerase II elongation complexes. 925 25
We have investigated the spatial relationship between sites containing newly synthesized RNA and domains containing proteins involved in transcription, such as
RNA polymerase II
and the transcription factors
TFIIH
, Oct1, BRG1, E2F-1 and glucocorticoid receptors, using dual immunofluorescence labelling followed by confocal microscopy on cultured cells. As expected, a high degree of colocalisation between the
RNA polymerase II
and sites containing newly synthesised RNA was observed. Like the newly synthesised RNA and the
RNA polymerase II
, we found that all the transcription factors that we studied are distributed more or less homogeneously throughout the nucleoplasm, occupying numerous small domains. In addition to these small domains,
TFIIH
was found concentrated in coiled bodies and Oct1 in a single large domain of about 1.5 microm in 30% of the cells in an asynchronous HeLa cell culture. Remarkably, we found little or no relationship between the spatial distribution of the glucocorticoid receptor, Oct1 and E2F-1 on the one hand and
RNA polymerase II
and transcription sites on the other hand. In contrast, a significant but incomplete overlap was observed between the spatial distributions of transcription sites and BRG1 and
TFIIH
. These results indicate that many of the transcription factor-rich nuclear domains are not actively involved in transcription. They may represent incomplete transcription initiation complexes, inhibitory complexes, or storage sites.
...
PMID:Nuclear distribution of transcription factors in relation to sites of transcription and RNA polymerase II. 926 65
The acetylation of histones increases the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to transcription factors [1,2], relieving transcriptional repression [3] and correlating with the potential for transcriptional activity in vivo [4 - 7]. The characterization of several novel histone acetyltransferases - including the human GCN5 homolog PCAF (p300/CBP-associated factor) [8], the transcription coactivator p300/CBP [9], and TAFII250 [10] - has provided a potential explanation for the relationship between histone acetylation and transcriptional activation. In addition to histones, however, other components of the basal transcription machinery might be acetylated by these enzymes and directly affect transcription. Here, we examine the acetylation of the basal transcriptional machinery for
RNA polymerase II
by PCAF, p300 and TAFII250. We find that all three acetyltransferases can direct the acetylation of TFIIEbetaand TFIIF, and we identify a preferred site of acetylation in TFIIEbeta. Human TFIIE consists of two subunits, alpha(p56) and beta(p34), which form a heterotetramer (alpha2 beta2) in solution ([11], reviewed in [12]). TFIIE enters the preinitiation complex after
RNA polymerase II
and TFIIF, suggesting that TFIIE may interact directly with
RNA polymerase II
and/or TFIIF [13,14]. In addition, TFIIE can facilitate promoter melting either in the presence or absence of
TFIIH
and can stimulate
TFIIH
-dependent phosphorylation of the carboxy-terminal domain of
RNA polymerase II
[15-18]. TFIIF has an essential role in both transcription initiation and elongation ([19,20], for review see [21]). We discuss the implications of the acetylation of TFIIEbetaand TFIIF for transcriptional control by PCAF, p300 and TAFII250.
...
PMID:Acetylation of general transcription factors by histone acetyltransferases. 928 13
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