Lecture 17 - Regulation of transcription Flashcards
How do transcription factors activate transcription?
- contacts with the basal transcription machinery
- chromatin modification
How did scanning experiments identify the DNA elements (activators) in the β globin promoter?
- mutation of every base 100bp upstream of the start point revealed 3 sequence elements that were critical for transcription
1. TATA box (~25-30)
2. CAAT box (-75) [mutations have a strong affect on promoter strength]
3. GC box (-90)
These are found in the promoters of many genes (mot necessarily in the same location
Give examples of how promoters have mix and match modules
SV40 early promoter
-promoter in a viral gene
-6XGC box regulatory element, followed by TATA
Thymidine kinase promoter
-uses a combination of sequences, octamer, GC, CAAT, GC, TATA
Histone H2B promoter
-octamer, CAAT, CAAT, octamer, TATA
Dependent upon the different regulatory regions, get different recruitment of different complexes
How are transcription factors expressed?
- Constituatively
-some TF binding sites are found in many promoters
-e.g. GC box recognised by SP1 - Inducible
a-tissue specific TFs involved in developmental regulation
-e.g. Erythroid specific GATA factor
b-some promoters are directly inducible rather than developmentally programmed
-e.g. heat shock
What are the different modalities of transcriptional activators?
Activators have independent DNA binding and activation domains
- shown by domain swap experiments
1. DNA binding domain - Zn finger
- H-T-H
- Leucine zipper
2. Activation domain - Acidic e.g. VP16, Gal4
- Glu rich e.g. SP1
- Pro rich e.g. CTF
What is the process of the domain swap experiments done to identify the different domains of the transcriptional activators?
-took yeast transcriptional activators, LexA and Gal4 - both of which have an activating domain and DNA binding domain
-took DNA binding domain from Gal4 and the the Gal4activating domain this would initatie transcription (same for LexA)
-took the activating domain of Gal4 and made a mutant by combining it to the DNA binding domain of LExA
FOUND;
-in the presence of Gal4 promoter transcription was not acitvated (no opportunity to bind to Gal4 binding domain)
-in the presence of the LexA promotor it would bind to the DNA and initate transcription
Key conclusion: the DNA binding domain and transcription activating domains of activator proteins are independent molecules
What was the key conclusion from the domain swap experiments?
Key conclusion: the DNA binding domain and transcription activating domains of activator proteins are independent molecules
In what manner do TF function?>
TF function cooperatively
- 1TA give 1 unit of transcription
- 2TA give 10 units of transcription
- 4TA give 500 units of transcription
Not completely proportionate - only require limited numbers of TA to amplify the signal
What to TA bind to?
Promoters and enhancers
What are enhancers?
- regulatory sequences that act at a distance (up to several thousand bases away
- lack promoter activity themselves
- dramatically enhance the activity of promoters
- can be located either upstream or downstream of the promoter
- can act in either orientation
- can be composed of multiple sequence elements
- interact with mediator protein
- can have an effect on chromatin structure and mediate accessibility
What is involved in the regulation of transcription?
Basal factors: Required by RNA pol II to form the initiation complex at all promotors
-protein:protein interactions stabilise
-important to transmit signal
Activator: binds to the DNA sequence elements and stimulates transcription
Co-activators: factors that required for transcriptional activation but do not directly bind DNA
-can’t activate on their own
What is an insulator?
A sequence that prevents an activating or inactivating effect passing from one side to another
-an insulastor between an enhancer and a promoter results in no enhancement of transcription
Can also prevent the spread of heterochromatin
What might mediate the action of enhancers to be limited to particular promoters?
Insulators
-stops the enhancer, which can act many bp away from the promoter, from acting on many many promoters
How do insulators prevent the spread of heterochromatin?
Heterochromatin, which is highly compact, can spread as a repressive modulation e.g. methylation, can spread.
This is prevented by insulators
What is The Mediator?
- a large modular complex (21 proteins) that conveys regulatory signals from gene specific activators and repressors to the core transcriptionl machinery
- physically interacts with RNApol II CTD
- how it transmits the signal from the activator to the polymerase is unknown
- can interact independently of DNA