Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) Tat protein regulates transcription by stimulating RNA polymerase processivity. Using immobilised templates, we have been able to study the effects of Tat on protein kinase activity during the pre-initiation and elongation stages of HIV-1 transcription. In pre-initiation complexes formed at the HIV-1 LTR, the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II is rapidly phosphorylated by transcription factor IIH (TFIIH). Addition of Tat does not affect either the rate or the extent of CTD phosphorylation in the pre-initiation complexes. By contrast, Tat is able to stimulate additional CTD phosphorylation in elongation complexes. This reaction creates a novel form of the RNA polymerase that we have called RNA polymerase IIo*. Formation of the RNA polymerase IIo* occurs only after transcription of templates carrying a functional TAR RNA element and is strongly inhibited by low concentrations of 5,6-dichloro-1-beta- D -ribofuranosyl benzimidazole (DRB), a potent inhibitor of CDK9, the protein kinase subunit of the Tat-associated kinase (TAK). Immunoblotting experiments have shown that CDK9 and its associated cyclin, cyclin T1, are present at equivalent levels in both the pre-initiation and elongation complexes. We conclude that activation of the CDK9 kinase, leading to CTD phosphorylation, occurs only in elongation complexes that have transcribed through the Tat-recognition element, TAR RNA.
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PMID:Direct evidence that HIV-1 Tat stimulates RNA polymerase II carboxyl-terminal domain hyperphosphorylation during transcriptional elongation. 1043 93

Activation of cellular genes typically involves control of transcription initiation by DNA-binding regulatory proteins. The human immunodeficiency virus transactivator protein, Tat, provides the first example of the regulation of viral gene expression through control of elongation by RNA polymerase II. In the absence of Tat, initiation from the long terminal repeat is efficient, but transcription is impaired because the promoter engages poorly processive polymerases that disengage from the DNA template prematurely. Activation of transcriptional elongation occurs following the recruitment of Tat to the transcription machinery via a specific interaction with an RNA regulatory element called TAR, a 59-residue RNA leader sequence that folds into a specific stem-loop structure. After binding to TAR RNA, Tat stimulates a specific protein kinase called TAK (Tat-associated kinase). This results in hyperphosphorylation of the large subunit of the RNA polymerase II carboxyl- terminal domain. The kinase subunit of TAK, CDK9, is analogous to a component of a positive acting elongation factor isolated from Drosophila called pTEFb. Direct evidence for the role of TAK in transcriptional regulation of the HIV long terminal repeat comes from experiments using inactive mutants of the CDK9 kinase expressed in trans to inhibit transcription. A critical role for TAK in HIV transcription is also demonstrated by selective inhibition of Tat activity by low molecular mass kinase inhibitors. A second link between TAK and transactivation is the observation that the cyclin component of TAK, cyclin T1, also participates in TAR RNA recognition. It has been known for several years that mutations in the apical loop region of TAR RNA abolish Tat activity, yet this region of TAR is not required for binding by recombinant Tat protein in vitro, suggesting that the loop region acts as a binding site for essential cellular co-factors. Tat is able to form a ternary complex with TAR RNA and cyclin T1 only when a functional loop sequence is present on TAR.
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PMID:Tackling Tat. 1055 Feb 6

Human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) is a highly pathogenic lentivirus that requires transcription of its provirus genome for completion of the viral life cycle and the production of progeny virions. Since the first genetic analysis of HIV-1 in 1985, much has been learned about the transcriptional regulation of the HIV-1 genome in infected cells. It has been demonstrated that HIV-1 transcription depends on a varied and complex interaction of host cell transcription factors with the viral long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter. The regulatory elements within the LTR interact with constitutive and inducible transcription factors to direct the assembly of a stable transcription complex that stimulates multiple rounds of transcription by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). However, the majority of these transcripts terminate prematurely in the absence of the virally encoded trans-activator protein Tat, which stimulates HIV-1 transcription elongation by interacting with a stem-loop RNA element (TAR) formed at the extreme 5' end of all viral transcripts. The Tat-TAR interaction recruits a cellular kinase into the initiation-elongation complex that alters the elongation properties of RNAPII during its transit through TAR. This review summarizes our current knowledge and understanding of the regulation of HIV-1 transcription in infected cells and highlights the important contributions human lentivirus gene regulation has made to our general understanding of the transcription process.
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PMID:Regulation of HIV-1 transcription. 1055 96

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

Human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1), Tat activates elongation of RNA polymerase II transcription at the HIV-1 promoter through interaction with the cyclin T1 (CycT1) subunit of the positive transcription elongation factor complex, P-TEFb. Binding of Tat to CycT1 induces cooperative binding of the P-TEFb complex onto nascent HIV-1 TAR RNA. Here the specific interaction between Tat protein, human cyclin T1, and HIV-1 TAR RNA was analyzed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer, using fluorescein-labeled TAR RNA and a rhodamine-labeled Tat protein synthesized through solid-phase chemistry. We find that CycT1 remodels the structure of Tat to enhance its affinity for TAR RNA and that TAR RNA further enhances the interaction between Tat and CycT1. We conclude that TAR RNA nucleates the formation of the Tat.P-TEFb complex through an induced fit mechanism.
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PMID:HIV-1 TAR RNA enhances the interaction between Tat and cyclin T1. 1094 37

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Tat interacts with cyclin T1 (CycT1), a regulatory partner of CDK9 in the positive transcription elongation factor (P-TEFb) complex, and binds cooperatively with CycT1 to TAR RNA to recruit P-TEFb and promote transcription elongation. We show here that Tat also stimulates phosphorylation of affinity-purified core RNA polymerase II and glutathione S-transferase-C-terminal-domain substrates by CycT1-CDK9, but not CycH-CDK7, in vitro. Interestingly, incubation of recombinant Tat-P-TEFb complexes with ATP enhanced binding to TAR RNA dramatically, and the C-terminal half of CycT1 masked binding of Tat to TAR RNA in the absence of ATP. ATP incubation lead to autophosphorylation of CDK9 at multiple C-terminal Ser and Thr residues, and full-length CycT1 (amino acids 728) [CycT1(1-728)], but not truncated CycT1(1-303), was also phosphorylated by CDK9. P-TEFb complexes containing a catalytically inactive CDK9 mutant (D167N) bound TAR RNA weakly and independently of ATP, as did a C-terminal truncated CDK9 mutant that was catalytically active but unable to undergo autophosphorylation. Analysis of different Tat proteins revealed that the 101-amino-acid SF2 HIV-1 Tat was unable to bind TAR with CycT1(1-303) in the absence of phosphorylated CDK9, whereas unphosphorylated CDK9 strongly blocked binding of HIV-2 Tat to TAR RNA in a manner that was reversed upon autophosphorylation. Replacement of CDK9 phosphorylation sites with negatively charged residues restored binding of CycT1(1-303)-D167N-Tat, and rendered D167N a more potent inhibitor of transcription in vitro. Taken together, these results demonstrate that CDK9 phosphorylation is required for high-affinity binding of Tat-P-TEFb to TAR RNA and that the state of P-TEFb phosphorylation may regulate Tat transactivation in vivo.
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PMID:CDK9 autophosphorylation regulates high-affinity binding of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 tat-P-TEFb complex to TAR RNA. 1095 91

Human RNA polymerase II recognizes a strong transcriptional pause signal in the initially transcribed region of HIV-1. We report the use of a limited-step transcription assay to dissect the mechanism underlying recognition of and escape from this HIV-1 pause. Our results suggest that the primary determinant of transcriptional pausing is a relatively weak RNA:DNA hybrid that triggers backtracking of RNA polymerase II along the RNA and DNA chains and displaces the RNA 3' OH from the active site. In contrast, two alternative RNA secondary structures, TAR and anti-TAR, are not required for pausing and affect it only indirectly, rather than through direct interaction with RNA polymerase II. TAR accelerates escape from the pause, but anti-TAR inhibits formation of TAR prior to pause escape. The behavior of RNA polymerase II at a mutant pause signal supports a two-step, non-equilibrium mechanism in which the rate-determining step is a conformational change in the enzyme, rather than the changes in nucleic-acid base-pairing that accompany backtracking.
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PMID:Roles of RNA:DNA hybrid stability, RNA structure, and active site conformation in pausing by human RNA polymerase II. 1147 60

Tat stimulates human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1), transcription elongation by recruitment of the human transcription elongation factor P-TEFb, consisting of CDK9 and cyclin T1, to the TAR RNA structure. It has been demonstrated further that CDK9 phosphorylation is required for high affinity binding of Tat/P-TEFb to the TAR RNA structure and that the state of P-TEFb phosphorylation may regulate Tat transactivation. We now demonstrate that CDK9 phosphorylation is uniquely regulated in the HIV-1 preinitiation and elongation complexes. The presence of TFIIH in the HIV-1 preinitiation complex inhibits CDK9 phosphorylation. As TFIIH is released from the elongation complex between +14 and +36, CDK9 phosphorylation is observed. In contrast to the activity in the "soluble" complex, phosphorylation of CDK9 is increased by the presence of Tat in the transcription complexes. Consistent with these observations, we have demonstrated that purified TFIIH directly inhibits CDK9 autophosphorylation. By using recombinant TFIIH subcomplexes, our results suggest that the XPB subunit of TFIIH is responsible for this inhibition of CDK9 phosphorylation. Interestingly, our results further suggest that the phosphorylated form of CDK9 is the active kinase for RNA polymerase II carboxyl-terminal domain phosphorylation.
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PMID:TFIIH inhibits CDK9 phosphorylation during human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transcription. 1157 68

In addition to its stimulatory effect on transcription of the HIV-1 LTR, the early protein of HIV-1, Tat, exhibits detrimental effects on the CNS by deregulating the expression of several cytokines and immunomodulators including TNFalpha. Activation of the viral promoter by Tat requires several cellular proteins including cyclin T1 and its partner, cdk9, which upon association with the TAR sequence of the LTR, forms a complex that enhances the activity of RNA polymerase II. Here, we examined the involvement of cyclin T1/cdk9 in Tat-mediated transcriptional activation of the TNFalpha promoter which has no TAR sequence. Results from transfection of human astrocytic cells revealed that both cyclin T1 and cdk9 stimulate the basal promoter activity of TNFalpha, although the level of such activation is decreased in the presence of Tat. Ectopic expression of Puralpha, a brain-derived regulatory protein which binds to Tat, enhanced the basal level of TNFalpha transcription, yet exerted a negative effect on the level of Tat activation of the TNFalpha promoter. The antagonistic effect of Puralpha and Tat upon the TNFalpha promoter was diminished in the presence of cyclin T1 and cdk9, suggesting cooperativity of Puralpha with cyclin T1 and cdk9 in Tat activation of the TNFalpha promoter. Results from protein-protein binding studies showed the interaction of Puralpha with both cyclin T1 and cdk9 through distinct domains of Puralpha which are in juxtaposition with each other. Interestingly, the site for cyclin T1 binding within Puralpha is adjacent to the region which is important for Tat/Puralpha association. In light of these observations, we propose a model which ascribes a bridging role for Puralpha in assembling Tat, cyclin T1, and cdk9 around the promoter region of TAR-negative genes such as TNFalpha, which is responsive to Tat activation.
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PMID:Functional interaction between cyclin T1/cdk9 and Puralpha determines the level of TNFalpha promoter activation by Tat in glial cells. 1173 Sep 34

Tat is a key trans-activator of HIV-1 gene transcription and major progress has been accomplished in recent years in regard to understanding its mechanism of action. An important breakthrough was the identification of the TAR-Tat-Cyclin (Cyc) T1-Cyclin-dependent kinase 9 (CDK9) complex, in which CDK9 can hyperphosphorylate the carboxyl-terminus domain (CTD) of the RNA polymerase (RNAP) II complex. A different activity of Tat has recently been identified in reverse transcription. Notably, mutated HIV-1 that lacks a functional Tat protein cannot efficiently generate reverse transcription products following infection of permissive cells. Furthermore, Tat can also inhibit reverse transcriptase activity in cell-free assays and can act as a suppressor of reverse transcription at late stages in the viral life cycle. This suppressor activity of Tat can restrict the premature reverse transcription of viral RNA in the cytoplasm and allows the viral genome to be packaged as intact RNA molecules.
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PMID:The role of Tat in HIV-1 replication: an activator and/or a suppressor? 1199 84


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