ABSTRACT
Large T antigen (T antigen), the early gene product of simian virus 40 (SV40), is a potent transcriptional activator of both cellular and viral genes. Recently we have shown that T antigen is tightly associated with TFIID and, in this position, performs a TATA-binding protein (TBP)-associated factor (TAF)-like function. Based on this observation, we asked whether T antigen affected steps in preinitiation complex assembly. Using purified components in in vitro complex assembly assays, we found that T antigen specifically enhances the formation of the TBP-TFIIA complex on the TATA element. T antigen accomplishes this by increasing the rate of formation of the TBP-TFIIA complex on the TATA element and by stabilizing the complexes after they are formed on the promoter. In addition, DNA immunoprecipitation experiments indicate that T antigen is associated with the stabilized TBP-TFIIA complexes bound to the DNA. In this regard, it has previously been shown that T antigen interacts with TBP; in the present study, we show that T antigen also interacts with TFIIA in vitro. In testing the ability of T antigen to stabilize the TBP-TFIIA complex, we found that stabilization is highly sensitive to the specific sequence context of the TATA element. Previous studies showed that T antigen could activate simple promoters containing the TATA elements from the hsp70 and c-fos gene promoters but failed to significantly activate similar promoters containing the TATA elements from the promoters of the SV40 early and adenovirus E2a genes. We find that the ability to stabilize the TBP-TFIIA complex on the hsp70 and c-fos TATA elements, and not on the SV40 early and E2A TATA elements, correlates with the ability or inability to activate promoters containing these TATA elements.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank members of the Alwine and Lieberman laboratories for help and comments on the manuscript. In addition, we thank Carol Prives for the recombinant baculovirus vector expressing the SV40 T-antigen protein.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant CA28379 awarded to J.C.A. by the National Cancer Institute.