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Transcriptional Regulation

Regulation of TATA-Binding Protein Binding by the SAGA Complex and the Nhp6 High-Mobility Group Protein

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Pages 1910-1921 | Received 12 Aug 2002, Accepted 19 Dec 2002, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Transcriptional activation of the yeast HO gene involves the sequential action of DNA-binding and chromatin-modifying factors. Here we examine the role of the SAGA complex and the Nhp6 architectural transcription factor in HO regulation. Our data suggest that these factors regulate binding of the TATA-binding protein (TBP) to the promoter. A gcn5 mutation, eliminating the histone acetyltransferase present in SAGA, reduces the transcription of HO, but expression is restored in a gcn5 spt3 double mutant. We conclude that the major role of Gcn5 in HO activation is to overcome repression by Spt3. Spt3 is also part of SAGA, and thus two proteins in the same regulatory complex can have opposing roles in transcriptional regulation. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments show that TBP binding to HO is very weak in wild-type cells but markedly increased in an spt3 mutant, indicating that Spt3 reduces HO expression by inhibiting TBP binding. In contrast, it has been shown previously that Spt3 stimulates TBP binding to the GAL1 promoter as well as GAL1 expression, and thus, Spt3 regulates these promoters differently. We also find genetic interactions between TBP and either Gcn5 or the high-mobility-group protein Nhp6, including multicopy suppression and synthetic lethality. These results suggest that, while Spt3 acts to inhibit TBP interaction with the HO promoter, Gcn5 and Nhp6 act to promote TBP binding. The result of these interactions is to limit TBP binding and HO expression to a short period within the cell cycle. Furthermore, the synthetic lethality resulting from combining a gcn5 mutation with specific TBP point mutations can be suppressed by the overexpression of transcription factor IIA (TFIIA), suggesting that histone acetylation by Gcn5 can stimulate transcription by promoting the formation of a TBP/TFIIA complex.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We acknowledge the generosity of these colleagues in providing strains or plasmids: Karen Arndt, Shelley Berger, Tim Formosa, Steve Hahn, Rohinton Kamakaka, Tetsuro Kokubo, Laurie Stargell, Kevin Struhl, Jesper Svestrup, Fred Winston, and Jerry Workman. We also thank Brad Cairns, Tim Formosa, Warren Voth, Dennis Winge, and Fred Winston for helpful discussions and Patrick Grant and Jerry Workman for communicating unpublished results.

This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health awarded to D.J.S.

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