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Transcriptional Regulation

RMP, a Novel RNA Polymerase II Subunit 5-Interacting Protein, Counteracts Transactivation by Hepatitis B Virus X Protein

, , , , , & show all
Pages 7546-7555 | Received 11 May 1998, Accepted 02 Sep 1998, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

ABSTRACT

To modulate transcription, regulatory factors communicate with basal transcription factors and/or RNA polymerases in a variety of ways. Previously, it has been reported that RNA polymerase II subunit 5 (RPB5) is one of the targets of hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) and that both HBx and RPB5 specifically interact with general transcription factor IIB (TFIIB), implying that RPB5 is one of the communicating subunits of RNA polymerase II involved in transcriptional regulation. In this context, we screened for a host protein(s) that interacts with RPB5. By far-Western blot screening, we cloned a novel gene encoding a 508-amino-acid-residue RPB5-binding protein from a HepG2 cDNA library and designated it RPB5-mediating protein (RMP). Expression of RMP mRNA was detected ubiquitously in various tissues. Bacterially expressed recombinant RMP strongly bound RPB5 but neither HBx nor TATA-binding protein in vitro. Endogenous RMP was immunologically detected interacting with assembled RPB5 in RNA polymerase in mammalian cells. The central part of RMP is responsible for RPB5 binding, and the RMP-binding region covers both the TFIIB- and HBx-binding sites of RPB5. Overexpression of RMP, but not mutant RMP lacking the RPB5-binding region, inhibited HBx transactivation of reporters with different HBx-responsive cis elements in transiently transfected cells. The repression by RMP was counteracted by HBx in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, RMP has an inhibitory effect on transcriptional activation by VP16 in the absence of HBx. These results suggest that RMP negatively modulates RNA polymerase II function by binding to RPB5 and that HBx counteracts the negative role of RMP on transcription indirectly by interacting with RPB5.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to R. G. Roeder for anti-RPB6 antibody, to M. Vigneron for anti-CTD monoclonal antibody, and to R. G. Roeder and A. Ishihama for encouraging discussions. We thank C. Matsushima, F. Momoshima, M. Yasukawa, and K. Kuwabara for their technical assistance.

This study was partly supported by a Science Grant from the Ministry of Education and Culture of Japan.

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