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Query: UNIPROT:P20226 (TATA-binding protein)
1,297 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a defined RNA polymerase II (pol II) transcription system, we have investigated the roles of basal factors at discrete stages during the transcription cycle (e.g., initiation, promoter clearance, and transcript elongation). Abortive initiation assays revealed that TATA-binding protein, transcription factors TFIIB and TFIIF, and pol II were necessary and sufficient to form functional initiation complexes on both linear and supercoiled templates. By contrast, TFIIE, TFIIH, and ATP hydrolysis were additionally required during promoter clearance from linear templates, while negative supercoiling obviated the need for these auxiliary factors. Furthermore, TFIIE, TFIIH, and supercoiling were not required during elongation. Our results suggest a role for TFIIH-associated helicase activity or supercoiling during promoter clearance rather than open complex formation. These results establish abortive initiation as a useful assay for studying functional initiation complex formation in defined eukaryotic transcription systems and provide a framework for investigating regulation at different stages of the eukaryotic transcription cycle.
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PMID:Transcription factors IIE and IIH and ATP hydrolysis direct promoter clearance by RNA polymerase II. 815 90

Transcription by RNA polymerase I (pol I), pol II, and pol III requires the TATA-binding protein (TBP). This protein functions in association with distinct TBP-associated factors (TAFs) which may specify the nature of the polymerase selected for initiation at a promoter site. In the pol III transcription system, the TBP-TAF complex is a component of the TFIIIB factor. This factor has been resolved into a TBP-TAF complex and another component, both of which are required for reconstitution of transcription by pol III. Neither the TBP-TAF complexes B-TFIID and D-TFIID, which were previously characterized as active for pol II transcription, nor TBP alone can complement pol III transcription reactions that are dependent upon the TBP-TAF subcomponent of TFIIIB. Surprisingly, the TBP-TAF subcomponent of TFIIIB is active in reconstitution of pol II transcription.
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PMID:TATA-binding protein and associated factors in polymerase II and polymerase III transcription. 824 10

Recent studies on RNA polymerase III (pol III) gene transcription have provided a new awareness of the molecular complexity of this process. Fortunately, while the number of transcription components has been increasing, fundamental similarities have emerged regarding the function of eukaryotic promoter elements and the factors that bind them to form preinitiation complexes. Among these, the ability of transcription factor IIIB (TFIIIB) and pol III to transcribe the Saccharomyces cerevisiae U6 gene suggests that the concept of a minimal pol II promoter comprising a TATA box and an initiator region has a parallel in the pol III system. Furthermore, for each of the three classes of eukaryotic RNA polymerase, the assembly of transcription preinitiation complexes and, to some extent, the nature of these complexes appears to be more similar than was previously anticipated. This work highlights the novel functions and transcriptional properties of newly identified pol III genes, discusses the diversity of pol III promoter structures and presents the notion that the exclusive use of extragenic promoters by some pol III genes (so-called type-3 genes) may have evolved since the divergence of yeast and higher eukaryotes. Additionally, recent progress is reviewed on the identification and cloning of subunits for TFIIIC and TFIIIB. Particular emphasis is given to two components of TFIIIB, the TATA-binding protein and a protein with TFIIB homology (PCF4), since the properties of these molecules suggest a model whereby the polymerase specificity of transcription complexes is determined.
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PMID:RNA polymerase III. Genes, factors and transcriptional specificity. 844 47

Immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene transcription in vitro can be reconstituted with a minimal reaction containing only TATA-binding protein (TBP), TFIIB, and RNA polymerase II (pol II) when the template is negatively supercoiled. Transcription from linear DNA templates containing either the IgH or the adenovirus major late promoters (MLPs) requires in addition TFIIF, TFIIE, TFIIH, and a fraction containing TFIIA and TFIIJ. Promoters vary in their activities in the minimal reaction. Initiation at the adenovirus MLP site was not observed in this reaction, even with templates containing negative superhelical density. When only TBP, TFIIB, and pol II were present in the reaction, the more negatively supercoiled the IgH template DNA was, the more active the transcription. It is suggested that the free energy of supercoiling promotes the formation of an open complex for initiation of transcription by the minimal set of transcription factors.
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PMID:DNA topology and a minimal set of basal factors for transcription by RNA polymerase II. 849 Sep 64

Host cell RNA polymerase II (pol II)-mediated transcription is inhibited by poliovirus infection. We demonstrate here that both TATA- and initiator-mediated basal transcription is inhibited in extracts prepared from poliovirus-infected HeLa cells. This inhibition can be reproduced by incubation of uninfected HeLa cell extracts with purified, recombinant poliovirus protease, 3Cpro. Transient-transfection assays demonstrate that 3Cpro, in the absence of other viral proteins, is able to inhibit cellular pol II-mediated transcription in vivo. Three lines of evidence suggest that inactivation of TATA-binding protein (TBP) is the major cause of inhibition of basal transcription by poliovirus. First, RNA pol II transcription in poliovirus-infected cell extract is fully restored by bacterially expressed TBP. Second, addition of purified TBP restores transcription in heat-treated nuclear extracts from mock- and virus-infected cells to identical levels. Finally, using a gel mobility shift assay, we demonstrate that incubation of TBP with the viral protease (3Cpro) inhibits its ability to bind TATA sequence in vitro. These results suggest that inhibition of pol II transcription in mammalian cells infected with poliovirus is, at least in part, due to the inability of modified TBP to bind pol II promoter sequences.
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PMID:Inhibition of basal transcription by poliovirus: a virus- encoded protease (3Cpro) inhibits formation of TBP-TATA box complex in vitro. 862 67

The yeast RNA polymerase III (pol III) general transcription factor TFIIIB is composed of three subunits; the TATA-binding protein (TBP)1, the TFIIB-related factor (BRF1), and a third factor termed TFIIIB90 or B". Here we report the purification of yeast TFIIIB90, cloning of the gene encoding TFIIIB90, and reconstitution of TFIIIB from recombinant polypeptides. The TFIIIB90 open reading frame encodes a 68-kDa polypeptide and has no obvious similarity to any other known protein sequences. The gene encoding TFIIIB90 is essential for viability of yeast. Using recombinant TFIIIB subunits, we found that TFIIIB90 interacts weakly with TBP in the absence of BRF1, and that this interaction is enhanced at least 25-fold by BRF1. In addition, TFIIIB90 showed pol III specificity as it could not interact with the pol II-specific TFIIB-TBP-DNA complex. To localize the regions of the TBP-DNA complex that interact with BRF1 and TFIIIB90, we tested whether the pol II factors TFIIA and TFIIB interfered with the binding of BRF1 and TFIIIB90 to TBP-DNA. Our results suggest that the binding sites for BRF1 and TFIIIB90 on TBP-DNA both overlap the binding sites for TFIIA and TFIIB.
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PMID:Cloning and functional characterization of the gene encoding the TFIIIB90 subunit of RNA polymerase III transcription factor TFIIIB. 866 56

A new gene, RRN11, has been defined by certain rrn mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae which are defective specifically in the transcription of 35 S rRNA gene by RNA polymerase I (pol I). We have cloned the gene and found that it encodes a protein of 507 amino acids. We have used a strain with the chromosomal RRN11 deleted and carrying HA1 epitope-tagged RRN11 on a plasmid to isolate a protein complex containing the protein encoded by RRN11. This protein complex complemented rrn6 mutant extracts, which were previously shown to be deficient in the essential pol I transcription factor called Rrn6/7 complex or core factor (CF). The CF complex was previously shown to consist of three proteins, the 102- and 60-kDa subunits encoded by RRN6 and RRN7, respectively, and the 66-kDa subunit. The results of the above complementation experiments combined with mobility of Rrn11p in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis relative to Rrn6p and Rrn7p led to the conclusion that RRN11 encodes the 66-kDa subunit of CF. Glutathione S-transferase-Rrn11p fusion protein was found to bind strongly to 35S-labeled Rrn6p and Rrn7p but only weakly to 35S-labeled TATA-binding protein. Similarly, glutathione S-transferase-Rrn7p fusion protein bound strongly to 35S-labeled Rrn6p and Rrn11p but only weakly to 35S-labeled TATA-binding protein. These results are consistent with the fact that one can purify CF consisting of Rrn6p, Rrn7p, and Rrn11p from yeast cell extracts, but the purified complex does not contain TATA-binding protein. RRN11 was shown to be an essential gene, and [3H]uridine pulse experiments demonstrated directly that RRN11 is essential for rDNA transcription by pol I in vivo. Thus all three subunits of CF are essential for rDNA transcription. Because of the resemblance of CF to mammalian essential pol I transcription factor SL1, the amino acid sequences of Rrn11p and the other two subunits of CF were compared with those of the three TATA-binding protein-associated factors (TAFs) in the human SL1, TAFI48, TAFI63, and TAFI110. No significant similarity was detected between two sets of the proteins. Similarity as well as differences between CF and SL1 are discussed.
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PMID:RRN11 encodes the third subunit of the complex containing Rrn6p and Rrn7p that is essential for the initiation of rDNA transcription by yeast RNA polymerase I. 870 72

Gene-specific activators control the access of RNA polymerase II (pol II) to promoters in several ways: by chromatin rearrangement involving an ATP-dependent SWI-SNF complex; by the synergistic recruitment of transcription factor IID (TFIID); and by either the sequential recruitment of basal transcription factors and pol II or the recruitment of a preformed pol II holoenzyme which includes most of the basal factors. One of the most significant recent developments has been the demonstration that distinct subunits of TFIID (namely subunits of the TATA-binding protein associated factor) target different activators, basal factors, and core promoter elements.
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PMID:Mechanisms of transcription complex assembly. 874 79

Transcription by RNA polymerase III (pol III) in yeast requires the assembly of an initiation complex comprising the TATA-binding protein (TBP), a 90-kDa polypeptide (TFIIIB90), and a 70-kDa polypeptide (TFIIIB70). TFIIIB70 interacts with TBP, a unique pol III subunit, C34, and the 131-kDa subunit of the pol III-specific complex, TFIIIC. TFIIIB70 was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The specific transcription activity of rTFIIIB70 is 22-58% that of the native yeast and in vitro synthesized factor. However, only a small fraction (0.07-0.32%) of the TFIIIB70 from these sources results in the synthesis of full-length RNA. The data suggest that TFIIIB70 function may be limited by an unfavorable recruitment equilibrium into the preinitiation complex. Quantitative DNase I "footprint" titrations of yeast TBP to the adenovirus major late promoter were conducted at a series of constant TFIIIB70 concentrations. A value of -0.7 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol was determined for the cooperative free energy of formation of the TBP.TFIIIB70.DNA complex at concentrations of TFIIIB70 sufficient to partition all of the binding cooperativity to the TBP binding isotherm. A Kd of 44 +/- 23 nM characterizes the TFIIIB70 concentration dependence of the TBP.TFIIIB70 cooperativity. The relationship deltalog K/deltalog (TFIIIB70) is consistent with the linkage of a single molecule of TFIIIB70 with the TBP-promoter binding reaction.
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PMID:Expression and purification of the RNA polymerase III transcription specificity factor IIIB70 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its cooperative binding with TATA-binding protein. 895 1

Rapid evolution of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene promoters often prevents their recognition in a foreign species. Unlike animal systems, we show that foreign plant rRNA gene promoters are recognized in an alien species, but tend to program transcription by a different polymerase. In plants, RNA polymerase I transcripts initiate at a TATATA element (+1 is underlined) important for promoter strength and start-site selection. However, transcripts initiate from +32 following transfection of a tomato promoter into Arabidopsis. The rRNA gene promoter of a more closely related species, Brassica oleracea, programs both +1 and +29 transcription. A point mutation at +2 improving the identity between the Brassica and Arabidopsis promoters increases +1 transcription, indicating a role for the initiator element in species-specificity. Brassica +29 transcripts can be translated to express a luciferase reporter gene, implicating RNA polymerase II. TATA mutations that disrupt TATA-binding protein (TBP) interactions inhibit +29 transcription and luciferase expression. Co-expressed TBP proteins bearing compensatory mutations restore +29 transcription and luciferase activity, suggesting a direct TBP-TATA interaction. Importantly, +1 transcription is unaffected by the TATA mutations, suggesting that in the context of pol I recognition, the TATA-containing initiator element serves a function other than TBP binding.
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PMID:Species-specificity of rRNA gene transcription in plants manifested as a switch in RNA polymerase specificity. 897 59


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