Autor: |
Tang, Hongbing, Liu, Yingyun, Madabusi, Lakshmi, Gilmour, David S. |
Zdroj: |
Molecular and Cellular Biology; April 2000, Vol. 20 Issue: 7 p2569-2580, 12p |
Abstrakt: |
RNA polymerase II pauses in the promoter-proximal region of many genes during transcription. In the case of the hsp70promoter from Drosophila melanogaster, this pause is long-lived and occurs even when the gene is not induced. Paused polymerase escapes during heat shock when the transcriptional activator heat shock factor associates with the promoter. However, pausing is still evident, especially when induction is at an intermediate level. Yeast Gal4 protein (Gal4p) will induce transcription of the hsp70promoter in Drosophilawhen binding sites for Gal4p are positioned upstream from the hsp70TATA element. To further our understanding of promoter-proximal pausing, we have analyzed the effect of Gal4p on promoter-proximal pausing in salivary glands of Drosophilalarvae. Using permanganate genomic footprinting, we observed that various levels of Gal4p induction resulted in an even distribution of RNA polymerase throughout the first 76 nucleotides of the transcribed region. In contrast, promoter-proximal pausing still occurs on endogenous and transgenichsp70promoters in salivary glands when these promoters are induced by heat shock. We also determined that mutations introduced into the region where the polymerase pauses do not inhibit pausing in a cell-free system. Taken together, these results indicate that promoter-proximal pausing is dictated by the regulatory proteins interacting upstream from the core promoter region. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
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