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Functional Domains and Upstream Activation Properties of Cloned Human TATA Binding Protein
466
Citations
25
References
1990
Year
Functional DomainsMolecular RegulationGeneticsMolecular BiologyGene TranscriptionTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionHuman TfiidGene StructureProtein FunctionUpstream Activation PropertiesGene ExpressionCell BiologyFunctional GenomicsTata Binding ProteinTranscription RegulationHuman ProteinSignal TransductionNatural SciencesGene RegulationCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
The TATA binding protein, TFIID, plays a central role in the initiation of eukaryotic mRNA synthesis. Here, we present a human cDNA clone for this factor. Comparison of its predicted protein sequence with those from Drosophila and yeast reveals a highly conserved carboxyl-terminal 180 amino acids. By contrast, the amino-terminal region of TFIID has diverged in both sequence and length. A striking feature of the human protein is a stretch of 38 glutamine residues in the NH2-terminal region. Expression of human TFIID in both Escherichia coli and HeLa cells produces a protein that binds specifically to a TATA box and promotes basal transcription; the conserved COOH-terminal portion of the protein is sufficient for both of these activities. Recombinant TFIID forms a stable complex on a TATA box either alone or in combination with either of the general transcription factors, TFIIA or TFIIB. Full-length recombinant TFIID is able to support Sp1 activated transcription in a TFIID-depleted nuclear extract, while a deletion of the NH2-terminal half of the protein is not. These results indicate the importance of the NH2-terminal region for upstream activation functions and suggest that additional factors (co-activators) are required for mediating interactions with specific regulators.
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