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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The alpha subunit of Escherichia coli DNA-dependent RNA polymerase is encoded by the rpoA gene and plays a major role in enzyme assembly. A set of C-terminal deletion mutations of the rpoA gene was constructed. The results of mixed reconstitution experiments in vitro, using the truncated alpha polypeptides encoded by the rpoA deletion mutants, suggest that the amino-terminal two-thirds of alpha subunit is sufficient for the formation of pseudo-core complexes containing both beta and beta' subunits.
J Mol Biol 1991 Mar 05
PMID:Identification of a subunit assembly domain in the alpha subunit of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. 200 95

In vitro transcription of the ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) shows a remarkable species specificity such that human and mouse rDNA cannot use heterologous extracts of each other. The region that is responsible for this specificity has been studied using human-mouse chimeric genes and characteristic structures of both core promoters are presented. When the mouse sequence is substituted by the corresponding human sequence from upstream, the promoter activity in the mouse extract begins to decline at nucleotide -32 or -30, decreasing gradually and is lost completely at -19. A similar gradual decrease was noted for the 3' side substitution, which started at nucleotide -14 and was completed when up to the nucleotide -22 mouse position was replaced by the corresponding sequence from human. Thus, in the mouse rDNA core promoter, the sequence that is involved in species specificity resides only in a stretch encompassing the non-conserved region between the distal conserved sequence (DCS) and the proximal conserved sequence (PCS), plus two altered nucleotides in the PCS. When human rDNA is transcribed with human cell extract, the mouse sequence cannot substitute for the human sequence within the region from nucleotide -43 to +17 without affecting promoter activity significantly. This asymmetry of species specificity is due to the presence of nucleotides -43, +1 and +17, which are sensitive to change in only the human core promoter. The difference in the 5' border is ascribed to the species specificity of a transcription factor TFID, which recognizes this region. But the large difference of the 3' border is apparently due to another factor, possibly RNA polymerase I itself, because this region is not recognized by TFID in either human or mouse. Mammalian rDNA core promoter appears to consist of a tandem mosaic in which three evolutionarily conserved sequences alternate with non-conserved sequences having certain functionally important nucleotides. Not only non-conserved sequences and non-conserved nucleotides in conserved sequences, but also the spacings between the three conserved regions, play a crucial role in species specificity.
J Mol Biol 1991 Mar 05
PMID:Structure of the core promoter of human and mouse ribosomal RNA gene. Asymmetry of species-specific transcription. 200 7

In the absence of other components of the RNA polymerase III transcription machinery, transcription factor IIIA (TFIIIA) can be displaced from both strands of its DNA-binding site (the internal control region) on the somatic-type 5S rRNA gene of Xenopus borealis during transcription elongation by bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase, regardless of which DNA strand is transcribed. Furthermore, substantial displacement is observed after the template has been transcribed only once. Since the complete 5S rRNA transcription complex has previously been shown to remain stably bound to the gene during repeated rounds of transcription by either RNA polymerase III or bacteriophage SP6 RNA polymerase, these results indicate that a factor(s) in addition to TFIIIA is required to create a complex that will remain stably associated with the template during transcription. Thus, transcription complex stability during passage of RNA polymerase cannot be explained solely on the basis of the DNA-binding properties of TFIIIA.
Mol Cell Biol 1991 Aug
PMID:Displacement of Xenopus transcription factor IIIA from a 5S rRNA gene by a transcribing RNA polymerase. 207 3

In Drosophila melanogaster, 240-base-pair (bp) repeats, clustered in tandem arrays within the ribosomal DNA nontranscribed spacer region, include sites of RNA polymerase I-dependent transcription initiation and elements that stimulate the rate of transcription from the downstream precursor rRNA (pre-rRNA) promoter. We have analyzed the in vivo transcriptional activity of a large set of recombinant constructs in which tandem arrays of distinct segments derived from a 240-bp repeat were inserted upstream of the pre-rRNA promoter. The results indicate that activating spacer elements are confined to a region of 70 bp. Enhancing units overlap with spacer promoters, since DNA segments that stimulate transcription at the gene promoter also efficiently drive transcription initiation. The finding that artificial spacer arrays invariably stimulate pre-rRNA transcription initiation in an orientation-dependent fashion suggest that spacer-initiated transcription is involved in the enhancement process. The minimal spacer activating segment includes a perfect copy of a core domain of the gene promoter extending from -24 to +10 flanked by poorly homologous upstream DNA sequences. Spacer and gene promoters are functionally interchangeable as activating units. However, the different combination of DNA elements within the two determines a functional hierarchy, as only the pre-rRNA promoter is responsive to the stimulatory action of upstream units.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 Sep
PMID:Spacer promoters are orientation-dependent activators of pre-rRNA transcription in Drosophila melanogaster. 211 1

A DNA-binding protein has been identified from extracts of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae which binds to sites present in the promoter regions of a number of yeast genes transcribed by RNA polymerase II, including SIN3 (also known as SDI1), SWI5, CDC9, and TOP1. This protein also binds to a site present in the enhancer for the 35S rRNA gene, which is transcribed by RNA polymerase I, and appears to be identical to the previously described REB1 protein (B. E. Morrow, S. P. Johnson, and J. R. Warner, J. Biol. Chem. 264:9061-9068, 1989). When oligonucleotides containing a REB1-binding site are placed between the CYC1 upstream activating sequence and TATA box, transcription by RNA polymerase II in vivo is substantially reduced, suggesting that REB1 acts as a repressor of RNA polymerase II transcription. The in vitro levels of the REB1 DNA-binding activity are reduced in extracts prepared from strains bearing a mutation in the SIN3 gene. A greater reduction in REB1 activity is observed if the sin3 mutant strain is grown in media containing galactose as a carbon source.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 Apr
PMID:Identification of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA-binding protein involved in transcriptional regulation. 218 Dec 83

The synthesis of ribosomal proteins (r proteins) under the conditions of greatly reduced RNA synthesis were studied by using a strain of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae in which the production of the largest subunit (RPA190) of RNA polymerase I was controlled by the galactose promoter. Although growth on galactose medium was normal, the strain was unable to sustain growth when shifted to glucose medium. This growth defect was shown to be due to a preferential decrease in RNA synthesis caused by deprivation of RNA polymerase I. Under these conditions, the accumulation of r proteins decreased to match the rRNA synthesis rate. When proteins were pulse-labeled for short periods, no or only a weak decrease was observed in the differential synthesis rate of several r proteins (L5, L39, L29 and/or L28, L27 and/or S21) relative to those of control cells synthesizing RPA190 from the normal promoter. Degradation of these r proteins synthesized in excess was observed during subsequent chase periods. Analysis of the amounts of mRNAs for L3 and L29 and their locations in polysomes also suggested that the synthesis of these proteins relative to other cellular proteins were comparable to those observed in control cells. However, Northern analysis of several r-protein mRNAs revealed that the unspliced precursor mRNA for r-protein L32 accumulated when rRNA synthesis rates were decreased. This result supports the feedback regulation model in which excess L32 protein inhibits the splicing of its own precursor mRNA, as proposed by previous workers (M. D. Dabeva, M. A. Post-Beittenmiller, and J. R. Warner, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:5854-5857, 1986).
Mol Cell Biol 1990 May
PMID:Conditional expression of RPA190, the gene encoding the largest subunit of yeast RNA polymerase I: effects of decreased rRNA synthesis on ribosomal protein synthesis. 218 18

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae 5S rRNA gene was used as a model system to study the requirements for assembling transcriptionally active chromatin in vitro with purified components. When a plasmid containing yeast 5S rDNA was assembled into chromatin with purified core histones, the gene was inaccessible to the yeast class III gene transcription machinery. Preformation of a 5S rRNA gene-TFIIIA complex was not sufficient for the formation of active chromatin in this in vitro system. Instead, a complete transcription factor complex consisting of TFIIIA, TFIIIB, and TFIIIC needed to be formed before the addition of histones in order for the 5S chromatin to subsequently be transcribed by RNA polymerase III. Various 5S rRNA maxigenes were constructed and used for chromatin assembly studies. In vitro transcription from these assembled 5S maxigenes revealed that RNA polymerase III was readily able to transcribe through one, two, or four nucleosomes. However, we found that RNA polymerase III was not able to efficiently transcribe a chromatin template containing a more extended array of nucleosomes. In vivo expression experiments indicated that all in vitro-constructed maxigenes were transcriptionally competent. Analyses of protein-DNA interactions formed on these maxigenes in vivo by indirect end labeling indicated that there are extensive interactions throughout the length of these maxigenes. The patterns of protein-DNA interactions formed on these genes are consistent with these DNAs being assembled into extensive nucleosomal arrays.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 May
PMID:Transcription factor requirements for in vitro formation of transcriptionally competent 5S rRNA gene chromatin. 218 33

The yeast cell nucleus has previously been shown to be divided into two regions by a variety of microscopic approaches. We used antibodies specific for the 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine cap structure of small nuclear ribonucleic acids (snRNAs) and for a protein component of small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles to identify the distribution of small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles within the yeast cell nucleus. These studies were performed with the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. By using immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy, most of the abundant snRNAs were localized to the portion of the nucleus which has heretofore been referred to as the nucleolus. This distribution of snRNAs is different from that found in mammalian cells and suggests that the nucleolar portion of the yeast nucleus contains functional domains in addition to those associated with RNA polymerase I activity.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 Jul
PMID:Differential distribution of factors involved in pre-mRNA processing in the yeast cell nucleus. 219 58

We showed previously that the human initiator tRNA gene, in the context of its own 5'- and 3'-flanking sequences, was not expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here we show that switching its 5'-flanking sequence with that of a yeast arginine tRNA gene allows its functional expression in yeast cells. The human initiator tRNA coding sequence was either cloned downstream of the yeast arginine tRNA gene, with various lengths of intergenic spacer separating them, or linked directly to the 5'-flanking sequence of the yeast arginine tRNA coding sequence. The human initiator tRNA made in yeast cells can be aminoacylated with methionine, and it was clearly separated from the yeast initiator and elongator methionine tRNAs by RPC-5 column chromatography. It was also functional in yeast cells. Expression of the human initiator tRNA in transformants of a slow-growing mutant yeast strain, in which three of the four endogenous initiator tRNA genes had been inactivated by gene disruption, resulted in enhancement of the growth rate. The degree of growth rate enhancement correlated with the steady-state levels of human tRNA in the transformants. Besides providing a possible assay for in vivo function of mutant human initiator tRNAs, this work represents the only example of the functional expression of a vertebrate RNA polymerase III-transcribed gene in yeast cells.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 Sep
PMID:Expression and function of a human initiator tRNA gene in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 220 92

In HeLa cells, RNA polymerase III (pol III)-mediated transcription is severely inhibited by poliovirus infection. This inhibition is due primarily to the reduction in transcriptional activity of the pol III transcription factor TFIIIC in poliovirus-infected cells. However, the specific binding of TFIIIC to the VAI gene B-box sequence, as assayed by DNase I footprinting, is not altered by poliovirus infection. We have used gel retardation analysis to analyze TFIIIC-DNA complexes formed in nuclear extracts prepared from mock- and poliovirus-infected cells. In mock-infected cell extracts, two closely migrating TFIIIC-containing complexes, complexes I and II, were detected in the gel retardation assay. The slower migrating complex, complex I, was absent in poliovirus-infected cell extracts, and an increase occurred in the intensity of the faster-migrating complex (complex II). Also, in poliovirus-infected cell extracts, a new, rapidly migrating complex, complex III, was formed. Complex III may have been the result of limited proteolysis of complex I or II. These changes in TFIIIC-containing complexes in poliovirus-infected cell extracts correlated kinetically with the decrease in TFIIIC transcriptional activity. Complexes I, II, and III were chromatographically separated; only complex I was transcriptionally active and specifically restored pol III transcription when added to poliovirus-infected cell extracts. Acid phosphatase treatment partially converted complex I to complex II but did not affect the binding of complex II or III. Dephosphorylation and limited proteolysis of TFIIIC are discussed as possible mechanisms for the inhibition of pol III-mediated transcription by poliovirus.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 Oct
PMID:A transcriptionally active form of TFIIIC is modified in poliovirus-infected HeLa cells. 220 7


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