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Chapt 11 General Transcription Factors in Eukaryotes

Chapt 11 General Transcription Factors in Eukaryotes. Student learning outcomes : Explain how General Transcription Factors (GTFs): Attract RNAP to promoters Dictate direction and starting point of transcription Responsible for basal level of transcription:

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Chapt 11 General Transcription Factors in Eukaryotes

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  1. Chapt 11General Transcription Factors in Eukaryotes Student learning outcomes: Explain how General Transcription Factors (GTFs): Attract RNAP to promoters Dictate direction and starting point of transcription Responsible for basal level of transcription: (gene-specific activators regulate level of transcription) Explain that GTFs for Pol II (mRNA) include: TFs IIA, IIB, IID, IIE, IIF, IIH; TBP, TAFIIs, mediator, IIS

  2. Explain that GTFs for Pol I (rRNA, snRNA) include: SL1 (TIF-1B) and UBF Explain that GTFs for Pol III (tRNA, 5S rRNA) include: TFIII A, B and C Describe briefly new techniques (from Chapt. 5): DNase footprinting, EMSA (mobility shift assay), S1 nuclease, primer extension, Run-off transcription Impt. Figures: 1*, 2*, 4, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14*, 25*, 26*, 28, 29, 32, 38 39, 42 Review Q: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22, 24, 26, 28, 29, 30, 33, 35, 38; AQ 1, 2

  3. EMSA – electrophoretic mobility shift assay • can identify specific protein complexes binding DNA; • complexes formed in vitro are analyzed on 4% PAG • (nondenaturing gels); • antibodies to specific proteins assist analysis Shift Fig. 5.36

  4. DNase I footprinting - where proteins bind: • DNA labeled at one end: • add increasing amounts of protein; • cleave with DNase I (nonspecific cleavage), • compare with DNA seq ladder Fig. 5.37

  5. S1 nuclease - 5’ end of specific transcript S1 is nonspecific Dnase for ss DNA • Probe longer than expected transcript; • labeled at one end • Hybridize to transcript; • Add S1; • Resolve on gel Fig. 5.27

  6. Primer extension assay identifies start of specific transcript, relative amounts • Primer specific to transcript • (made in vitro or in vivo) • Reverse transcribe • See size of product on gel Fig. 5.30

  7. Run-off transcription Identifies start of transcription in vitro, relative amounts Fig. 5.31

  8. **11.1 Class II Factors (pol II makes mRNA) • General transcription factors (GTFs) combine with pol II to form preinitiation complex (PIC) • Initiates transcription when NTPs available • Tight binding -> formation of RPo (open promoter complex), melted DNA at transcription start site • Class II preinitiation complex contains: • Pol II • 6 general transcription factors (each multisubunit): • TFIIA TFIIB TFIID TFIIE TFIIF TFIIH (Named for biochemical fractionation peaks; needed for basal transcription by pol II)

  9. Four ordered Distinct Preinitiation Complexesidentified from in vitro expts with pure proteins Model promoter AdML (adenovirus major late, which has TATA, Inr and DPE) • TFIID + TFIIA binds to TATA box; forms DA complex • TFIIB binds next -> DAB complex • TFIIF helps pol II bind -34 to +17: DABPolF complex • Last, TFIIE then TFIIH bind to form complete preinitiation complex = DABPolFEH In vitro, TFIIA seems to be optional

  10. EMSA assays identify components of PICAdML model promoter; pure proteins Fig. 1

  11. DNase footprinting identifies region boundDAB binds about -20 to -35; DABpolF to +17 Figs. 2, 3

  12. Model of Formation of DABPolF Complex Fig. 4

  13. Structure and Function of TFIID complex= TBP + TAFIIs TATA-box binding protein (TBP)Highly evolutionarily conserved Binds minor groove of TATA box Saddle-shaped TBP on DNA Underside of saddle forces open minor groove TATA box is bent into 80° curve 8 to 10 TBP-associated factors (TAFIIs) specific for class II Fig. 6 TBP:TATA TBP green; TATA orange; other DNA blue

  14. Versatility of TBP (38-kD) • Genetic studies demonstrated TBP mutant cell extracts (ts mutants) are deficient in: • Transcription of class II genes (even if no TATA) • Transcription of class I and III genes (no TATA) • TBP is universal transcription factor required by all three classes of genes • Required in transcription of at least some genes of the Archaea, single-celled organisms lacking nuclei; Archaea also have IIB-like protein; evolutionarily closer to eukaryotes that to Bacteria

  15. TBP-Associated Factors (TAF11S) for pol II • 8 proteins named by MW • Most evolutionarily conserved in eukaryotes • Identified by immuno-ppt TBP • Several functions : • Interact with core promoter • Interact with gene-specific transcription factors • When attached to TBP, extend binding of TFIID beyond TATA box (footprint) Fig. 8

  16. Conservation of TAFIIS TFIID (TBP + TAFs) stimulates transcription off Inr DPE promoters Fig. 9 Fig. 10

  17. TAFs stimulate binding of TBP to promoters • TAFII250 and TAFII150 help TBP bind to initiator and DPE of promoters • TAFII250 has enzymatic activities: • Histone acetyltransferase • Protein kinase (itself, TFIIF) • TAFII110 aids TFIID interaction with Sp1 bound to GC boxes upstream of transcription start • TAFs enable TBP to bind to: TATA-less promoters that contain elements such as GC box Fig. 12; Hsp70 promoter

  18. Model for Interaction of TBP and Promoters; TAFs aid or recruit TBP Fig. 13

  19. TFIID can respond to many activators of transcription (Chapt. 12)Different TAFs are required for different Activators Fig. 14; NTF-1 uses TAFII 150 or TAF11 60; SP1 uses TAFII110; Other activators use other TAFs

  20. Exceptions to Universality of TAFIIs and TBP • TAFs not universally required for class II genes • Even TBP is not universally required • Some promoters in higher eukaryotes respond to an alternative protein such as TRF1 (TBP-related factor 1 in Drosophila nerual tissue) • TFTC (TBP-free TAFII-containing complex) can promote PIC • General transcription factor NC2: • Stimulates transcription from DPE-containing promoters • Represses transcription from TATA-containing promoters

  21. Different requirements for TAFs for yeast expression; (ts TAFs mutants tested)Rpb1 is required for all class II transcription

  22. Structure and Function of TFIIB • TFIIB (35 kD) is a single polypeptide • TFIIB binds to • TBP at TATA box via its C-terminal domain • Pol II via its N-terminal domain (finger) • Single strand DNA template • TFIIB positions pol II active center 25 –30 bp downstream of TATA box

  23. TFIIB Domains C-terminal domain binds to TBP at TATA box; N-terminal domain binds to pol II And ss DNA Fig. 17: pol II regions include clamp, dock, wall, and the grey shaded; TBP green

  24. TFIIHis a complex factor • TFIIH last GTF to join preinitiation complex (PIC) • 2 major roles in transcription initiation: • Phosphorylates CTD of pol II (IIa -> IIo) • Unwinds DNA at transcription start site to create transcription bubble • Contains 9 subunits in 2 complexes • Protein kinase complex of 4 subunits • Core TFIIH complex of 5 subunits has 2 DNA helicase/ATPase activities

  25. TFIIH Phosphorylates CTD of Pol II • PIC forms with hypo-phosphorylated pol II (IIA) • TFIIH phosphorylates serines 2 and 5 in the heptad repeat in CTD of Rpb1, largest RNAP subunit • creates phosphorylated form of pol II (IIo) • phosphorylation essential for initiation Fig. 22; Pol IIb lacks CTD

  26. Phosphorylated Pol IIO During Elongation • TFIIH phosphorylates ser2 and 5 to initiate • During shift from initiation to elongation, phosphorylation on serine 5 of heptad repeat is lost, removed by a phosphatase • If phosphorylation of serine 2 is also lost, pol II pauses until rephosphorylation by a non-TFIIH kinase occurs (pTEFb)

  27. Initiation • TFIID with TFIIB, TFIIF and pol II form minimal initiation complex at initiator • Addition of TFIIH, TFIIE and ATP allow DNA melting initiator region, phosphorylation of pol II CTD (Rpb1) • Allow production of abortive transcripts; transcription stalls at about +10 Fig. 25 part

  28. Expansion of Transcription Bubble • Energy from ATP • DNA helicase of TFIIH causes unwinding of DNA • Expanded transcription bubble releases stalled pol II • Pol II can now clear promoter Fig. 25 part

  29. Model of Initiation, Promoter Clearance, Elongation • Elongation needs NTPs, pTEFb to phosphorylate • TBP and TFIIB at promoter • TFIIE and TFIIH dissociate Fig. 25

  30. Model: Assembly of GTFs and pol II at promoter; transcription from R to L Fig. 26; Roger Kornberg

  31. Mediator Complex and Pol II HoloenzymeRoger Kornberg lab; Rick Young lab Mediator: • Collection of ~20 proteins considered GTF; • Found often as part of class II preinitiation complexes • not required for initiation, • is required for activated transcription (Chapt. 12) Possible to assemble preformed preinitiation complex by adding some GTFs to pol II holoenzyme; then add with TBP, TFIIB, E and H to promoter

  32. Elongation Factor TFIIS • Eukaryotes control transcription primarily at initiation • Some control at elongation • TFIIS, isolated from tumor cells, specifically stimulates transcription elongation • TFIIS stimulates proofreading of transcripts, likely by stimulating RNase activity of pol II • Proofreading: correction of misincorporated nucleotides, by cleaving off a few and replacing 3’

  33. Elongation and TFIIS • Pol II not transcribe steady rate • Short stops in transcription: transcription pauses • Pauses for variable lengths of time • Tend to occur at defined pause sites where DNA sequence destabilizes RNA-DNA hybrid, causing pol II to backtrack • If backtracks too far, pol II cannot recover alone: Transcription arrest • Pol II needs help from TFIIS during transcription arrest This marks the end of Pol II section Fig. 28

  34. 11.2 Class I Factors • RNA polymerase I plus 2 transcription factors make up preinitiation complex; much simpler than PIC for pol II • Pol I has many subunits, some shared with pol II and pol III (Table 10.2) • Transcription factors: • A core-binding factor, SL1 (humans) or TIF-IB • A UPE-binding factor, upstream-binding factor (UBF in mammals) or upstream activating factor (UAF in yeast)

  35. Core-Binding Factor SL1 (Bob Tjian) • Originally isolated by ability to direct pol I initiation • Species specificity • Fundamental transcription factor required to recruit pol I to promoter Fig. 31; in vitro transcription; promoters contain small insertions, deletions; primer extension assay C and T = DNA seq; a = no promoter

  36. Upstream-Binding Factor (UBF) is assembly factor • UBF helps SL1 bind to core promoter element • Bends DNA dramatically • Degree of reliance on UBF varies among organisms • 97-kD polypeptide Fig. 32; footprint; rRNA gene; *enhanced DNase cleave

  37. Structure and Function of SL1 • Human SL1 = TBP and TAFs which bind TBP tightly: • TAFI110 • TAFI63 • TAFI48 • TAFIs different from those in TFIID • Yeast, other organisms have different TAFIs Fig. 35; immuno-ppt SL1 with anti-TBP antibody; dissociate and re-ppt (6, 7)

  38. 11.3 Class III Transcription Factors (TFIII s) • TFIIIA: transcription factor bound to internal promoter of 5S rRNA gene, stimulated its transcription in vitro (Bob Roeder) • Two other transcription factors TFIIIB and TFIIIC • Transcription of tRNA genes requires only TFIIIB and TFIIIC • Transcription of 5S rRNA genes requires all three Fig. 10.26

  39. TFIIIA • First eukaryotic transcription factor discovered • First member of family of DNA-binding proteins that feature zinc motif (Chapt. 12): • Zinc finger is finger-shaped protein domain • Contains 4 amino acids that bind zinc ion • TFIIIA has 2 Cys, 2 His (others have 4 Cys) • Finger binds major groove of DNA

  40. TFIIIB and TFIIIC • Both are required for transcription of classical pol III genes • Depend on each other for activity • TFIIIC is assembly factor that allows TFIIIB to bind just upstream of transcription start site • TFIIIB can remain bound, help initiate repeated transcription rounds Fig. 38; footprint on tRNA genes (yellow); lane d has heparin added to remove loose proteins

  41. Assembly of Preinitiation Complex (PICIII) • TFIIIC (huge protein) binds to internal promoter (boxes A and B) • TFIIIC promotes binding of TFIIIB with its TBP • TFIIIB promotes pol III binding at start site • Transcription begins Fig. 39

  42. Preinitiation Complexes can form on TATA-Less Promoter • Assembly factor binds • Another factor, containing TBP, is now attracted • Complex is sufficient to recruit polymerase (except for some class II genes) • Transcription begins

  43. The Role of TBP • Assembly of preinitiation complex (PIC )on each type of eukaryotic promoter begins with binding of assembly factor(s) • TBP is this factor with TATA-containing class II and class III promoters • If TBP is not first bound protein, it still becomes part of growing PIC and serves organizing function • Specificity of TBP depends on associated TAFs

  44. Conclusion – eukaryotic transcription is really complex compared to prokaryotes General Transcription Factors (GTF or TF): Attract different RNA polymerases to promoters Dictate direction and starting point of transcription Responsible for basal level of transcription (gene-specific activators control level of transcription) GTF vary for promoters/ pol of 3 classes: Pol II: IIA, IIB, IID, IIE, IIF, IIH; TBP, TAFIIs, mediator, IIS Pol I: SL1 (has TBP) and UBF Pol III: TFIII A, IIIB (has TBP) and IIIC

  45. Review questions 1. Describe in order the proteins that assemble in vitro to form class II preinitiation complex. • Describe role of TBP and the TAFIIs • Describe DNase footprint, S1 nuclease experiment. • Compare class I and class III factors 26. What is the holoenzyme pol II, and how does it differ from the core pol II?

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