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Article

Mechanism of Mediator Recruitment by Tandem Gcn4 Activation Domains and Three Gal11 Activator-Binding Domains

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 2376-2390 | Received 06 Aug 2009, Accepted 04 Mar 2010, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Targets of the tandem Gcn4 acidic activation domains in transcription preinitiation complexes were identified by site-specific cross-linking. The individual Gcn4 activation domains cross-link to three common targets, Gal11/Med15, Taf12, and Tra1, which are subunits of four conserved coactivator complexes, Mediator, SAGA, TFIID, and NuA4. The Gcn4 N-terminal activation domain also cross-links to the Mediator subunit Sin4/Med16. The contribution of the two Gcn4 activation domains to transcription was gene specific and varied from synergistic to less than additive. Gcn4-dependent genes had a requirement for Gal11 ranging from 10-fold dependence to complete Gal11 independence, while the Gcn4-Taf12 interaction did not significantly contribute to the expression of any gene studied. Complementary methods identified three conserved Gal11 activator-binding domains that bind each Gcn4 activation domain with micromolar affinity. These Gal11 activator-binding domains contribute additively to transcription activation and Mediator recruitment at Gcn4- and Gal11-dependent genes. Although we found that the conserved Gal11 KIX domain contributes to Gal11 function, we found no evidence of specific Gcn4-KIX interaction and conclude that the Gal11 KIX domain does not function by specific interaction with Gcn4. Our combined results show gene-specific coactivator requirements, a surprising redundancy in activator-target interactions, and an activator-coactivator interaction mediated by multiple low-affinity protein-protein interactions.

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://mcb.asm.org/.

We thank Barry Stoddard and Rachel Klevit for encouragement and much valuable advice on protein-protein interactions and protein structure, Leonid Kisselev for assistance with protein purification and FP assays, and members of the Hahn lab and Ted Young for comments throughout the course of this work. We also thank Roland Strong and Vlad Vigdorovich for advice on protein binding assays and Jeff Delrow for assistance with microarray analysis.

This work was supported by training grants T32 CA80416 to E.H. and T32 CA09657 to B.A.K. and grant 5RO1 GM075114 to S.H.

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