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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1998, p. 6571-6583, Vol. 18, No. 11
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Novel Cofactors and TFIIA Mediate Functional Core Promoter
Selectivity by the Human TAFII150-Containing
TFIID Complex
Ernest
Martinez,
Hui
Ge,
Yong
Tao,
Chao-Xing
Yuan,
Vikas
Palhan, and
Robert G.
Roeder*
Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021
Received 23 June 1998/Returned for modification 27 July
1998/Accepted 31 July 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
TATA-binding protein-associated factors (TAFIIs) within
TFIID control differential gene transcription through interactions with
both activators and core promoter elements. In particular, TAFII150 contributes to initiator-dependent
transcription through an unknown mechanism. Here, we address whether
TAFIIs within TFIID are sufficient, in conjunction with
highly purified general transcription factors (GTFs), for differential
core promoter-dependent transcription by RNA polymerase II and whether
additional cofactors are required. We identify the human homologue of
Drosophila TAFII150 through cognate cDNA
cloning and show that it is a tightly associated component of human
TFIID. More importantly, we demonstrate that the human
TAFII150-containing TFIID complex is not sufficient, in
the context of all purified GTFs and RNA polymerase II, to mediate
transcription synergism between TATA and initiator elements and
initiator-directed transcription from a TAFII-dependent
TATA-less promoter. Therefore, TAFII-promoter interactions
are not sufficient for the productive core promoter-selective functions
of TFIID. Consistent with this finding, we have partially purified
novel cofactor activities (TICs) that potentiate the
TAFII-mediated synergism between TATA and initiator
elements (TIC-1) and TAFII-dependent transcription from
TATA-less promoters (TIC-2 and -3). Furthermore, we demonstrate an
essential function for TFIIA in TIC- and TAFII-dependent basal transcription from a TATA-less promoter. Our results reveal a
parallel between the basal transcription activity of TAFIIs through core promoter elements and
TAFII-dependent activator function.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The structure of the core promoter
region (i.e., DNA sequences flanking the transcription start site and
including the TATA, initiator, and downstream elements that interact
with the general transcription machinery) of protein-coding genes has
an important influence both on the efficiency of basal transcription
and on the ability of the core promoter to respond to upstream
promoter-bound activators in vivo and in vitro (reviewed in references
33, 38, and 46). Although the
general transcription machinery has been well characterized, little is
known about the factors and mechanisms that control its activity in a
core promoter-specific manner. Whereas various factors like E2F, YY1,
TFII-I, and USF may regulate transcription not only through upstream
promoter elements but also through interactions with the core promoter regions of certain genes (for reviews, see references
38 and 50), several components of
the basal transcription machinery have intrinsic and more general core
promoter-selective functions. For instance, the differential affinity
of TATA-binding protein (TBP) for different TATA box DNA sequences and
conformations can influence the efficiency of transcription initiation
(28, 37, 39; for a review, see reference
3). Previous studies have also demonstrated
differential requirements for the general transcription factors (GTFs)
TFIIE, TFIIF, and TFIIH for basal transcription from different
supercoiled promoter templates (27). In addition, RNA
polymerase II (pol II), by itself, appears to have weak sequence preferences (4) and is involved in start site selection in yeast in conjunction with TFIIB and TFIIF (29, 40). More
recently, TBP-associated factors (TAFIIs) within TFIID
have been shown to be essential both for the synergistic function of
TATA and initiator elements (14, 19, 45) and for basal
transcription from TATA-less promoters through an alternative
transcription initiation pathway that is largely independent of TBP-DNA
interactions (19, 20). Importantly, the core
promoter-selective function of TAFIIs has been further
confirmed in studies of yeast cells (24, 35).
How do TAFIIs contribute to core promoter-specific
transcription? Depending on the core promoter context,
TAFIIs have been shown to either stabilize or destabilize
TBP/TFIID-DNA interactions (10, 14, 17, 45). DNase I
footprinting and UV cross-linking experiments with highly purified
TFIID have provided evidence for several TAFIIs being in
close proximity to DNA, both immediately upstream and downstream of the
TATA box and over the initiator and downstream region of certain
TATA-containing and TATA-less promoters (2, 5, 14, 25, 31, 44,
53). In particular, Drosophila
TAFII150 has been reported to interact directly with the adenovirus major late (AdML) and Drosophila Hsp70 core
promoters (44, 45). Interestingly, this interaction
correlates with increased stability of the TFIID-promoter complex and
with the requirement for Drosophila
TAFII150, as part of a complete TFIID or in a
trimeric complex with TBP and TAFII250, for
TATA-dependent initiator function in vitro (13, 45).
Similarly, human TFIID interacts synergistically with the TATA,
initiator, and downstream regions of the AdML and model TATA- and
initiator-containing synthetic core promoters in a manner that is
dependent on functional initiator sequences and strengthened by TFIIA
(10). However, because so far a homologue of
Drosophila TAFII150 has not been observed
within the human TFIID complex, it has been suggested that, in
contrast to the situation in Drosophila, human
TAFII150 is not involved in initiator recognition by
human TFIID (10, 15). Nevertheless, a recently cloned
human factor (CIF150) that is similar to Drosophila
TAFII150, but apparently not associated with human
TFIID/TBP, was reported to be required in addition to TFIID for
TATA-dependent initiator activity in a partially purified in vitro
transcription system (16).
The studies cited above clearly establish an important core
promoter-specific role of TAFIIs and implicate
TAFII150 in TATA-dependent functions of the
initiator and downstream regions in certain promoters. However, besides
TFIID/TAFIIs, the factors and molecular mechanisms involved
in differential core promoter-selective transcription, especially for
specific transcription initiation at TAFII-dependent TATA-less promoters, remain poorly characterized. This is because earlier studies used either partially purified systems and/or, in the
case of TATA-less promoters, core promoter constructs that are not
strictly TAFII dependent in vitro (i.e., that can support TBP-mediated transcription through low-affinity but functional TBP
binding sites). In a further analysis of the molecular mechanisms involved in TAFII-mediated core promoter selectivity, we
have cloned the human homologue of Drosophila
TAFII150. We show that it is essentially identical to
CIF150, but in contrast to what was reported recently for CIF150
(16), we establish that it is a stably associated component
of the human TFIID complex. Furthermore, and more importantly, we have
identified at least three novel TAFII- and
initiator-dependent cofactors (TICs) that are different from the
previously characterized initiator region-binding proteins YY1,
TFII-I, and USF and are selectively required for the core promoter-specific functions of the human
TAFII150-containing TFIID complex through the initiator
region of TATA-containing and TATA-less promoters. In addition, our
analysis of the factors required for specific transcription initiation
from the TATA-less terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase (TdT) promoter
reveals a novel core promoter-specific basal function for TFIIA that is
different from a simple facilitation of TBP-DNA
interactions.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids.
pTdT(
1300/+59), pTdT(
41/+59),
pG5TdT(
41/+59) (G5-TdT), pG5TdT(
41/+33) (G5-TdT+33),
pG5TdT(
41TATA/+33) (INR+),
pG5TdT(
41TATA/Inr
+33) (INR
),
pG5E1bCAT (E1b), pG5h
Pol(
41/+58)CAT (
-Pol),
pAdML(
257/+33)CAT, and phHsp70(
33/+99)CAT (Hsp) have been
described previously (19, 20), as has
pMLI(
45/+65)CAT (ML) (8).
Cloning and expression of recombinant human
TAFII150.
A GenBank search revealed three
nonoverlapping mouse epitope sequence tag (EST) sequences (AA028778,
AA103510, and W13567) with 50 to 60% amino acid identity with
Drosophila TAFII150. These sequences were
used to design degenerate oligonucleotides for PCR-mediated cloning of
human TAFII150 cDNA sequences. A 3.8-kb cDNA encoding a
full-length human TAFII150 was finally isolated by PCR
with Pfu polymerase (Stratagene) from a HeLa Marathon-Ready cDNA library (Clontech) essentially as recommended by the
manufacturers. The sequence was confirmed from at least two independent
clones, except for one nucleotide position that differs in two
independent clones and could extend the N terminus by 10 amino acids
(see the legend to Fig. 1). A full-length FLAG-tagged human
TAFII150 (f:TAFII150) cDNA was cloned
into pT7Blue vector (Novagen) between SalI and
EcoRI sites, and the resulting pT7-hFL150 expression vector
was used to express recombinant protein in coupled in vitro transcription-translation reactions with the TNT system (Promega). The
sequence of the FLAG-tagged N terminus is MDYKDDDDKNRKK
(the FLAG sequence is underlined). For baculovirus-mediated expression of human f:TAFII150, the f:TAFII150
cDNA was inserted between the SmaI and NotI sites
of pVL1393 (Pharmingen). The resulting pVL1393-f:T150 vector was
cotransfected with BacVector 3000 (Novagen) Autographa
californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA into Sf9 cells to
produce recombinant viruses (essentially as recommended by the
manufacturers). Recombinant human f:TAFII150 was
purified from recombinant baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells by sonication in BC-300 buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.9], 20% glycerol, 300 mM KCl)
containing 0.1% Nonidet P-40 (NP-40), centrifugation at
100,000 × g, loading the supernatant on M2-agarose
(Kodak), washing the M2 resin extensively with BC-300, eluting with
BC-100 containing FLAG peptide (0.2 mg/ml), loading the eluate onto
Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)-agarose (Qiagen), washing
extensively with BC-1000, BC-500, and BC-100, and eluting the purified
recombinant f:TAFII150 with 250 mM imidazole in BC-100.
For antiserum production, a human TAFII150 cDNA
fragment encoding amino acids 539 to 655 cloned into
His6T-pET11d was used to express in bacteria a
hexahistidine (His6)-tagged protein that was purified on
Ni2+-NTA-agarose and used to immunize rabbits by standard
protocols (Covance). Western blotting was done by standard protocols
with an enhanced chemiluminescence detection kit (Amersham).
Cell lines and purification of GTFs, pol II, and TICs.
A
HeLa cell line derivative stably expressing f:TAFII100
was established by using the pCIN4 expression vector (32).
The cell line stably expressing f:TAFII135 will be
described elsewhere (42). Purification of epitope-tagged
TFIID (eTFIID) complexes was essentially as described previously
(5, 53), with the modifications described in the text.
Native TFIIA (Mono Q fraction) was purified as reported elsewhere
(21). Native TFIIA (Ni2+-NTA-agarose), f:TFIID,
TFIID (Mono S), TFIIE/F/H (Mono S), pol II (Mono Q), and
bacterially expressed recombinant (His6)-TFIIB, His6-TBP, Gal4-VP16, and PC4 were purified as described
elsewhere (12). Native TFIIH was purified from the
phosphocellulose (P11)-0.5 M KCl/DEAE-cellulose-0.12 M KCl
(P110.5/DE0.12) fraction, using the BC-buffer system
(12; see also above) complemented with 0.2 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and either 5 mM dithiothreitol or 10 mM
2-mercaptoethanol and sequential chromatographic steps as follows:
Q-Sepharose (Pharmacia), loaded at 0.12 M KCl (BC-120) and step
eluted with 0.3 M KCl (BC-300); heparin-Sepharose (Pharmacia), loaded
at 0.22 M KCl and step eluted with 0.6 M KCl; S-Sepharose (Pharmacia)
flowthrough at 0.22 M KCl; second S-Sepharose, loaded at 0.12 M KCl and
developed with a gradient from 0.12 to 0.5 M KCl; and Q-Sepharose (Q2)
developed with a gradient from 0.1 to 0.4 M KCl. TFIIH was monitored
during purification with antibodies against five of its subunits:
ERCC3, p62, CDK7, cyclin H, and MAT-1. In the final (Q2) step, TFIIH
eluted at 0.18 M KCl and was free of all the other GTFs and pol II. The
pol II DE52 fraction [pol II (DE)] was purified from a resuspended
HeLa nuclear pellet fraction (12) by precipitation with
0.09% polyethyleneimine, extraction of the pellet with TGED-250 (250 mM ammonium sulfate in buffer TGED [50 mM Tris-HCl {pH 7.9} at
4°C, 25% glycerol, 0.5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM EGTA, 2 mM dithiothreitol)
supplemented with a cocktail of protease inhibitors (Boehringer
Mannheim), and precipitation with 67% saturated ammonium sulfate. The
resuspended pellet was loaded onto a DE52 (Whatman) column in TGED-120,
washed subsequently with TGED-150, eluted with a step at TGED-600, and
then dialyzed to TGED-100. This simple pol II (DE) preparation (0.17 mg/ml; 1.4 mg of total protein for 80 ml of nuclear pellet) is in the A
form, 10 to 30% pure by Coomassie blue staining, and free of all GTFs.
Recombinant human His6-TFIIE is an equimolar combination of
both soluble His6-tagged subunits (34 and 57 kDa) expressed in bacteria and purified essentially as described for
His6-TFIIB (12). Recombinant human
His6-RAP74 was expressed in bacteria and purified as
described above over Ni2+-NTA-agarose but in the presence
of 4 M urea. Bacterially expressed recombinant human RAP30 was
solubilized from inclusion bodies in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride,
renatured by dialysis against BC buffer containing 150 mM KCl (BC-150),
loaded onto a heparin-Sepharose column in BC-150, and eluted with
BC-500. Recombinant His6-TFIIF was reconstituted by
corenaturation of equimolar amounts of RAP30 and His6-RAP74
(mixed in BC-500 with 4 M urea) by step dialysis to reach BC-100. TIC-1
was purified from the P11 0.5/DE 0.12 fraction (with BC buffers) as
schematized in Fig. 4F; this included chromatography on Q-Sepharose
where TIC-1 activity is found in the 0.12 M KCl flowthrough, followed
by chromatography on a heparin-Sepharose column, which was loaded at
0.12 M KCl, washed with 0.25 M KCl, and eluted with 0.5 M KCl. After
dialysis against BC-100, TIC-1 was sedimented through a 10 to 40%
glycerol gradient (in BC-100), where it sediments between aldolase (163 kDa) and albumin (73 kDa) standards analyzed in parallel on an
identical gradient. TIC-1 activity (fraction 8 [Fig. 4D]) was further
purified on a Ni2+-NTA-agarose column, where it loses some
activity and is found both in the flowthrough and in the bound
fractions. The TIC-1 activity in the flowthrough is purer and was used
for further characterizations. TIC-2 in the P11 0.5/DE 0.3 fraction was
loaded on double-stranded DNA (dsDNA)-cellulose in BC-100 and eluted with BC-600. This fraction was dialyzed to BC-100, loaded onto a
heparin-Sepharose column, and step eluted with BC-300 and BC-500. TIC-2
activity was present exclusively in the BC-300 eluate. TIC-1/3 corresponds to the previously described heparin Sepharose USA fraction
(12, 21).
Immunodepletions, reconstituted systems, and transcription and
primer extension analyses.
Specific immunodepletions of factors
from nuclear extracts or derived fractions were performed essentially
as previously described (7; see also figure legends)
in either BC-100 (TFII-I and TAFII100 depletions) or BC-400
(TFIIA depletion) buffer conditions. System A contains 1 µl of TFIIA
(Ni-NTA-agarose), 1 to 2 µl of eTFIID (5 ng of f:TBP/µl), 15 ng of
recombinant His6-TFIIB, 20 ng of recombinant
His6-TFIIE, 20 ng of recombinant His6-TFIIF,
0.15 µl of TFIIH (Q2), and 0.7 µl of pol II (DE). System B contains 1 µl of TFIIA (Mono Q), 1 µl of eTFIID (5 ng of f:TBP/µl), 15 ng
of recombinant His6-TFIIB, 10 ng of recombinant
His6-TFIIE, 20 ng of recombinant His6-TFIIF,
and 4 µl of P11 0.5/DE 0.3 (TFIIE/F/H/pol II) fraction. System C
contains 2 µl of TFIIA (Mono Q), 2 µl of TFIID (Mono S), 30 ng of
recombinant His6-TFIIB, 1 µl of TFIIE/F/H (Mono S), and
0.7 µl of pol II (Mono Q). Transcription reactions and primer
extension analyses, with primers for TdT (16mer Reverse; New England
Biolabs) and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) constructs
(CAT-30mer) labeled to the same specific activity, were essentially as
previously described (19, 20). Quantitations were done on a
Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The human
TAFII150 cDNA sequence is available under GenBank
accession no. AF040701.
 |
RESULTS |
Cloning of the human TAFII150 cDNA.
Because of
the importance of Drosophila TAFII150 for
core promoter recognition and initiator function and the apparent
absence of a human homologue in highly purified TFIID preparations (see the introduction), we undertook the cloning of the human
TAFII150 cDNA in order to reconstitute, with a complete
set of TAFIIs within TFIID, TFIID-mediated core
promoter selectivity in a homologous human in vitro transcription
system. We used the Drosophila TAFII150 amino acid sequence to search the sequence databases and identified three nonoverlapping mouse EST sequences with 50 to 60% amino acid
identity with Drosophila TAFII150.
Degenerate oligonucleotides based on the mouse EST sequences were used
to obtain (by PCR) corresponding human sequences that further were used
to clone (by high-fidelity PCR) a 3.8-kb cDNA encoding a full-length
human TAFII150 (Fig. 1;
see below and Materials and Methods). Human TAFII150 is
overall 46% identical to its Drosophila counterpart (Fig.
1) and clearly is the bona fide human homologue. Northern blot analyses
indicate a single 5.7-kb human TAFII150 mRNA species that is expressed comparably in all tissues tested (data not shown and
reference 20a). In an immunoblot analysis of HeLa
nuclear extracts, polyclonal antibodies raised against a recombinant
human TAFII150 protein fragment (amino acids 539 to
655) specifically recognize a ca. 135-kDa protein (see below) that
elutes, after chromatography on phosphocellulose P11 and DE52 resins
(Fig. 2A), in the P11 0.85/DE 0.3 TFIID-containing fraction (Fig. 2B, lane 5). Note that lower amounts of
TAFII150 (and other TAFIIs) are also
present in the P11 0.85/DE 0.12 fraction and can be detected after
concentration on a subsequent heparin-Sepharose column in the USA
fraction (see Fig. 5A, lane 5). In vitro transcription and translation
in rabbit reticulocyte lysates of f:TAFII150-encoding cDNA gives rise to a protein with an electrophoretic mobility similar
to that of the native human TAFII150 (Fig. 2B, lane 5 versus lane 6). This finding suggests that the cDNA encodes the full
(or near-full)-length protein (see also the legend to Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Predicted amino acid sequence of human
TAFII150. Positions identical to those in
Drosophila TAFII150 are marked with
asterisks (ClustalW alignment program of MacVector with a blosum
matrix; gap distance, 8; open gap penalty, 10; extend gap
penalty, 0.1). The underlined sequence (amino acids 90 to 100)
corresponds to a Glu-C peptide microsequence from the 135-kDa
TAFII protein of highly purified eTFIID. A mouse
TAFII150 N-terminal EST sequence (GenBank accession no.
AA200390) is 100% identical at the amino acid level to the human
sequence shown here from position 120 to the first methionine and
diverges upstream with no other ATG (data not shown). However, an
independent human 5'-end PCR clone has one nucleotide
difference, which creates an in-frame upstream but weaker
(non-Kozak) initiator ATG and adds the 10 predicted amino
acids MPLTGVEPAR at the N terminus. This upstream ATG has also been
observed recently in independent CIF150/TAFII150 cDNAs
(12a, 16).
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FIG. 2.
Human TAFII150
(hTAFII150) is a tightly associated component of TFIID.
(A) Scheme for fractionation and immunopurification of TFIID. Nuclear
extracts (NE) of HeLa cells and derived eTFIID-expressing cell lines
were chromatographed as indicated on phosphocellulose P11, DE52 (DE),
Mono S (MS), and anti-FLAG (M2)-agarose or anti-HA antibody
(Immuno-Affinity) resins. Numbers indicate the KCl molarity of
elutions. (B) Immunodetection of human TAFII150 in a
TFIID-containing fraction with anti-human TAFII150
antiserum and 5 µl of the indicated native fractions (lanes 1 to 5)
or of in vitro-translated f:TAFII150
(Retic-f:TAF150; lane 6) and control (Retic-control; lane 7)
lysates. The position of native TAFII150 and in
vitro-translated f:TAFII150 is indicated by an
arrowhead. An asterisk indicates a minor cross-reacting band of
unknown origin in lane 5. (C) Stable association of
hTAFII150 in immunopurified eTFIID, determined by
Western blot analysis of eTFIID complexes from human cell lines
expressing f:TBP, HA:TBP, f:TAFII100, or
f:TAFII135 and immunopurified directly from nuclear
extracts (lanes 2 and 3) or from a two-column-purified TFIID fraction
and washed with 0.3 M KCl (lane 1) or with 1.2 M KCl (lane 4; see also
text and panel A). The blot first was probed with anti-human
TAFII150 antibodies and then was stripped and reprobed
with antisera directed against the other TAFIIs and TBP as
indicated. The TAFII150 bands on the blot from the
first immunoreaction were coincident with the TAFII135
bands in the second immunoreaction (data not shown), and the relevant
portion of the first immunoblot is placed above the second blot in the
figure. Similar results were obtained in a side-by-side immunoblot
analysis of eTFIID and recombinant TAFII135 with
TAFII135 and TAFII150 antibodies (data not
shown). (D) Human TAFII150 is depleted from a
two-column (P11 0.85/DE 0.3) native TFIID fraction with specific
anti-TAFII100 antibodies. Lanes 1 and 2 are from an
immunoblot analysis of TFIID components present in the supernatant of a
control immunodepletion (with protein A resin alone) (mock;
lane 1) and in the supernatant after depletion with specific
anti-TAFII100 antibodies bound to protein A resin ( TAF100; lane 2). (E) The amounts of
TAFII150 relative to other TFIID subunits are similar
in nuclear extracts and in purified TFIID, as determined by Western
blot analysis of TBP and TAFIIs in 5 µl (lane 1)
and 1 µl (lane 2) of nuclear extract (NE), 8 µl of immunopurified
f:TBP-TFIID (eTFIID; lane 3), and 8 µl of native TFIID (Mono S
[MS]) fraction (lane 4). The positions and identities of the
different TAFIIs and TBP are indicated. (F) Recombinant
human f:TAFII150 has an electrophoretic mobility on
SDS-PAGE similar to that of human TAFII135 in eTFIID.
Highly purified f:TBP-TFIID (8 µl of eTFIID; lane 1) and two
independent preparations of baculovirus-expressed recombinant
immunopurified f:TAFII150 (a and b; lanes 2 and 3) were
analyzed on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel stained with silver. The
positions of TAFIIs and f:TBP (TBP) are indicated. An
arrowhead indicates the position of recombinant
f:TAFII150. An asterisk marks an unspecific (non-TAF)
protein band in eTFIID.
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Human TAFII150 is stably associated within the
TFIID complex.
Our finding of human TAFII150 in
P11 0.85-derived TFIID fractions suggested, in contrast to earlier
predictions and conclusions of a more recent report (15,
16), that human TAFII150, like other
TAFIIs, might be tightly associated with TBP within a
TFIID complex. To test this, we immunopurified eTFIID complexes from nuclear extracts of various cell lines expressing a FLAG- or
hemagglutinin-tagged version of TBP (f:TBP or HA:TBP),
f:TAFII100, or f:TAFII135. Different purification conditions were used to compare the relative stability of
association of different TAFIIs within the human TFIID
complex (Fig. 2A and C). We found that, independently of the tagged
subunit, all highly purified human eTFIID complexes contained
essentially the same relative amount of human TAFII150
(Fig. 2C), regardless of whether the immunopurification was carried out
at 0.3 M KCl (lanes 1 to 3), at 1.2 M KCl (lane 4), from two column
fractions (lanes 1 and 4), or directly from nuclear extracts (lanes 2 and 3). Moreover, TAFII150 is detected mainly in P11
0.85-derived fractions (Fig. 2B; see also below), depletion of TBP and
TAFs from a two-column native TFIID fraction with specific
anti-TAFII100 antibodies also depletes
TAFII150 (Fig. 2D), and the apparent ratios of
TAFII150 to other TAFIIs are similar in
crude nuclear extracts, partially purified TFIID, and highly purified
eTFIID (Fig. 2E). This finding suggests that most of the
TAFII150 in nuclear extracts is in TFIID and,
potentially, TFIID-related TAFII complexes such as the
recently described TBP-free TAFII complex (TFTC
[51]) (see Discussion). In addition, native human
TAFII150 and TAFII135 comigrate in
SDS-7.5% polyacrylamide gels by Western blot analyses (Fig. 2C and
legend). Consistent with this, the 135-kDa protein band
(TAFII135/TAFII150) in highly purified
eTFIID and purified recombinant f:TAFII150 have very
similar mobilities, in a side-by-side comparison, on a silver-stained
SDS-polyacrylamide gel (Fig. 2F). Furthermore, direct microsequencing
of the human 135-kDa protein band in eTFIID revealed a peptide uniquely
encoded by TAFII150 (Fig. 1, underlined sequence) as
well as peptides encoded by TAFII135, the human homologue
of Drosophila TAFII110 (42). This may
explain why human TAFII150 was not previously detected
in eTFIID. Consistent with the data presented here, independent analyses of eTFIID components by quantitative Western blots with recombinant TAFII standards have established that
TAFII150 is present at levels comparable to those of
several other TAFIIs (12a).
The human TAFII150-containing TFIID complex
cannot support initiator function and TATA-independent
transcription with only highly purified GTFs and pol II.
Having
established that human TAFII150 is a tightly associated
component of a TFIID complex, we tested whether highly purified human
eTFIID can direct TAFII-mediated core promoter-specific basal transcription in a homologous assay system (system A; Materials and Methods) reconstituted with highly purified recombinant TFIIB, TFIIE, and TFIIF and native TFIIA, TFIIH, and pol II. With this highly
purified assay system and with a linear TATA- and initiator-containing promoter (INR+ [Fig.
3E]), basal
transcription is dependent on every GTF and pol II (Fig. 3A) and
addition of an excess of TAFII150-containing eTFIID or
all other general components does not lead to a significant increase in
basal transcription (data not shown). Significantly, under these
conditions where GTFs are saturating, the transcription activity of a
TATA-containing promoter (Fig. 3E) is similar in the absence
(INR
) and presence (INR+) of a
functional initiator element on both linear (Fig. 3B, lane 3 versus
lane 4) and supercoiled (Fig. 3C, lane 5 versus lane 6 and lane 7 versus lane 8) templates. This is in stark contrast to the dramatic
stimulatory effect of the initiator in a crude nuclear extract (Fig. 3B
and C, lane 1 versus lane 2) that is, as shown previously,
TAFII dependent (14, 19). Interestingly, the
activity of the initiator-less promoter is lower in the nuclear extract
than in the purified system with both linear (Fig. 3B, lane 1 versus 3)
and, to a lesser extent, supercoiled (Fig. 3C, lane 1 versus 5)
templates. In contrast, with both supercoiled and linear templates, the
activity of the initiator-containing promoter is stronger in the
nuclear extract than in the purified system (Fig. 3B, lane 2 versus 4;
Fig. 3C, lane 2 versus lanes 6 and 8). Thus, our purified reconstituted
system is more efficient than the nuclear extract for basal
initiator-independent transcription but apparently lacks components
that mediate initiator-specific function. These results also suggest
that TAFII-dependent initiator function in the crude
nuclear extract may result from both antirepression and positive
stimulatory mechanisms. Consistent with the existence of
initiator-specific cofactor activities distinct from TFIID and the
other GTFs, eTFIID cannot direct basal initiator-mediated transcription
from the TAFII-dependent TATA-less TdT core promoter either
in the highly purified transcription system described above (Fig. 3D,
lane 2) or in less purified systems that also support efficient
TATA-dependent transcription (see below). Altogether, these results
demonstrate that a complete set of GTFs and TAFIIs (including TAFII150) within the human TFIID complex
is insufficient to promote initiator function, either alone or in
conjunction with a TATA element in a highly purified system, and
therefore that additional activities are required for the
TAFII-mediated core promoter-specific (initiator-dependent)
functions of TFIID.

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FIG. 3.
The human TAFII150-containing TFIID
complex is not sufficient for initiator function and TATA-independent
transcription in a system reconstituted with highly purified GTFs and
pol II. (A) A highly purified transcription system that is dependent on
all GTFs and pol II. An arrowhead indicates the position of specific
transcripts from the linear INR+ template analyzed by
primer extension. The complete system A (lane 1) contains
Ni-NTA-agarose-purified native TFIIA (A), recombinant TFIIB (B), eTFIID
(D), recombinant TFIIE (E), recombinant TFIIF (F), native TFIIH (H),
and pol II (Pol). Lanes 2 to 8, transcription reactions lacking single
components as indicated. Note that although TFIIA is required for
optimal basal TFIID-dependent transcription from this promoter, its
requirement is not absolute since low levels of transcription can be
seen in lane 2 on overexposures. (B) The highly purified
TFIID-dependent system does not support initiator function from a
linear TATA-containing promoter. Transcription from linearized
TATA-containing INR (lanes 1 and 3) and INR+
(lanes 2 and 4) promoters was analyzed in a HeLa cell nuclear extract
(NE; lanes 1 and 2) and in the purified system A (lanes 3 and 4) by
primer extension using the same 32P-labeled primer. (C)
TFIID-mediated transcription from supercoiled templates in a highly
purified system is independent of TFIIH and does not support
TATA-dependent initiator function. Transcription from the supercoiled
TATA-containing INR and INR+ templates was
analyzed as described above in a nuclear extract (lanes 1 and 2) and in
either the complete system A (lanes 7 and 8) or in system A lacking
TFIIH (lanes 5 and 6) or TFIIH and TFIID (lanes 3 and 4). (D) The
highly purified TFIID-dependent system does not support
initiator-directed basal transcription from a
TAFII-dependent TATA-less promoter. Basal transcription
from the supercoiled TATA-containing human Hsp70 core promoter (Hsp)
and the TATA-less mouse TdT ( 41 to +59) core promoter (TdT) was
analyzed as described above in a nuclear extract (lane 1) and in the
complete system A (lane 2) by transcribing equimolar amounts of
templates in the same reaction. Specific transcripts were analyzed by
primer extension using a mixture of two 32P-labeled
primers with similar specific activities (see below). (E) Schematic
structure of the core promoters used in this study. TdT is the natural
murine TdT gene core promoter (positions 41 to +33 or +59 relative to
the start site). INR+ is the natural TdT core promoter
( 41 to +33) with its 30 DNA sequence converted to a consensus
TATAAA element. INR is the same as
INR+ but without a functional initiator element. ML is the
natural AdML core promoter ( 45 to +65). Hsp is the natural human
Hsp70 gene core promoter ( 33 to +99). E1b is a construct containing
the AdE1b TATA box sequence (as indicated) cloned in a polylinker
sequence context upstream of a CAT reporter gene (see Materials and
Methods). -Pol is the human -polymerase gene core promoter ( 41
to +58). A boxed INR represents a functional initiator element. A boxed
DR indicates a promoter with TFIID-dependent DNase I footprints extending downstream of
the transcription initiation site (bent arrow). For the TdT promoter,
this footprint has been observed only in the presence of a TATA box
(i.e., in the INR+ construct [20, 26a]).
DR? in the -Pol core promoter indicates that this element has not
yet been analyzed. Primer extension analyses of transcripts from the
TdT and the INR+ and INR constructs are
performed with the same primer, and transcripts from the ML, Hsp, E1b,
and -Pol CAT gene-containing constructs are analyzed with a CAT
gene-specific primer (see Materials and Methods).
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TIC-1 potentiates TFIID-mediated initiator function from
TATA-containing promoters.
By using the most highly purified set
of GTFs and pol II (system A, described above) as a complementation
system, we searched for HeLa cell nuclear extract-derived fractions
that would restore the TAFII-dependent stimulatory activity
of the initiator in the context of TATA-containing core promoters. The
activity, which we call TIC-1, was originally identified, at the
two-column (P11 and DE52) stage, in two separate fractions (TIC-1 and
TIC-1/3 [Fig. 4F]) that, when added
independently to the highly purified system, preferentially stimulate
the initiator-containing core promoter (Fig. 4A, lanes 1 to 6; Fig. 4B,
lanes 3 to 8) in a TAFII-dependent manner (Fig. 4A, lanes 3 to 6 versus lanes 7 to 10). In accord with the results obtained with
nuclear extracts (Fig. 3B and C), these TIC-1-containing fractions
stimulate initiator-dependent transcription from both supercoiled (Fig.
4A) and linear (Fig. 4B) templates. They also stimulate significantly
(about 13-fold) the natural initiator-containing AdML core promoter (ML
[Fig. 3E]) but only marginally (about 2.5-fold) the natural
initiator-less human Hsp70 core promoter (Fig. 3E, 4D, and 4E, and data
not shown). Because the TIC-1/3 fraction is very complex and contains
other cofactors (i.e., TIC-3 and both positive and negative USA
components [see below]), we have further purified TIC-1 from the P11
0.5/DE 0.12 fraction (summarized in Fig. 4F). TIC-1 activity from the heparin-Sepharose [TIC-1 (HS)] fraction effects a 7- to 8-fold preferential stimulation of the INR+ template (Fig. 4C) and
a 13-fold stimulation of the initiator-containing ML template (Fig. 4D,
lane 1 versus lane 3) but only a weak (2.5-fold) stimulation of the
initiator-less Hsp promoter (Fig. 4D, lane 1 versus lane 3). TIC-1
activity from this heparin-Sepharose fraction sediments on a subsequent
glycerol gradient with a native apparent molecular mass in the range of
70 to 160 kDa (Fig. 4D, lanes 4 to 10). TIC-1 from the peak glycerol
gradient fraction 8 [Fig. 4C, TIC-1 (GG#8); Fig. 4D, lane 7] was
further purified on a Ni-NTA-agarose column, where it splits between
the flowthrough and bound fractions and loses part of its activity (see
also Materials and Methods). However, TIC-1 activity in the most
purified Ni-NTA-agarose flowthrough fraction still retains its
TAFII-dependent core promoter-specific activity, as
evidenced by a significant (fourfold) stimulation of the ML core
promoter with TFIID (Fig. 4E, lane 1 versus lane 2) but not with TBP
(lane 3 versus lane 4).

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FIG. 4.
TIC-1 is a core promoter-specific cofactor for
TAFII-dependent initiator function. (A) Reconstitution of
TAFII-dependent initiator-mediated transcription in the
highly purified system with a TIC-1-containing fraction. Transcription
from supercoiled INR and INR+ promoters was
analyzed in the complete system A (as for Fig. 3A) but with either 1 µl of eTFIID (lanes 1 to 6) or 10 ng of TBP (lanes 7 to 10) and in
the absence (lanes 1 and 2) or presence of 2 µl (lanes 3, 4, 7, and
8) or 4 µl (lanes 5, 6, 9, and 10) of the TIC-1/3 (P11 0.85/DE 0.12)
fraction. (B) Two separate fractions, TIC-1 and TIC-1/3, can restore
initiator function in the highly purified eTFIID-dependent system.
Transcription from linear INR and INR+
promoters was analyzed as described above in a nuclear extract (NE;
lanes 1 and 2) and in the highly purified system A (lanes 3 to 8)
either alone (lanes 7 and 8) or with 4 µl of either the P11 0.5/DE
0.12 fraction (TIC-1; lanes 3 and 4) or the P11 0.85/DE 0.12 fraction
(TIC-1/3; lanes 5 and 6). (C) Purified TIC-1 fractions with initiator
sequence-dependent activity. Transcripts from the linear
INR (open bars) and INR+ (hatched bars)
promoters were quantitated in the purified system A alone ( ) and in
system A complemented with either partially purified TIC-1 (HS)
fraction (0.5 and 1.0 µl; black triangle) or the activity peak of
glycerol gradient fraction 8 (GG#8; 5 µl; see also below). Closed
bars are initiator activities calculated as the ratio of
INR+ to INR
(INR+/INR ) transcripts and indicated by the
scale on the right side (as fold initiator-mediated stimulation). (D)
Core promoter-selective activity of TIC-1 on natural core promoters.
Transcription from linear AdML (ML) and human Hsp70 (Hsp) core promoter
templates (analyzed by primer extension) was compared in the highly
purified system A alone (lane 1) and with either increasing amounts
(0.5 and 2.0 µl) of the TIC-1 (HS) fraction (lanes 2 and 3) or with
fractions of a subsequent glycerol gradient (5 µl of each; lanes 4 to
10). Peak TIC-1 activity sediments at fraction GG#8 (lane 7). (E)
TAFII-dependent core promoter-selective activity of the
most purified TIC-1 fraction. Transcription from the Hsp and ML linear
templates was performed in system A with either 2 µl of eTFIID (lanes
1 and 2) or 10 ng of TBP (lanes 3 and 4) and in either the absence
(lanes 1 and 3) or presence (lanes 2 and 4) of the
Ni2+-NTA-agarose TIC-1 fraction. (F) Purification scheme
for TICs and TFIID used in the transcription systems. HeLa cell nuclear
extracts (NE) were chromatographed as indicated (see also Materials and
Methods) on phosphocellulose P11, DE52 (DE), Q Sepharose (QS),
heparin-Sepharose (HS), Ni2+-NTA-agarose (Ni),
dsDNA-cellulose (dsDNA), Mono S (MS), and anti-FLAG (M2)-agarose
(Immuno-Affinity) resins.
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To address whether TIC-1 is different from the previously characterized
factors implicated in initiator function, i.e.,
TAF
II150,
YY1, TFII-I, and USF (reviewed in reference
38; see also the
introduction), we performed
immunoblot analyses with specific
antibodies against these factors and
an excess (5- to 10-fold
the amount used for transcription) of a highly
active TIC-1 (HS)
fraction. The results show that the TIC-1 fraction
does not contain
detectable amounts of TAF
II150/TFIID
(Fig.
5A, lane 3), YY1, TFII-I,
and USF
(Fig.
5B, lane 1). Consistent with this, depletion of
USF
(
30) or TFII-I (Fig.
5C) from nuclear extracts does not
affect basal transcription from the AdML promoter (
30) (Fig.
5D, lane 1 versus lane 2) and YY1 does not mediate initiator function
from the AdML promoter (
43). Furthermore, in contrast to the
YY1 and TFII-I factors that function through TFIIA- and
TAF
II-independent
pathways in a TBP-dependent (i.e.,
TFII-I) system or in a TBP-independent
system requiring a
supercoiled promoter (i.e., YY1) (reviewed
in references
33,
38, and
43), TIC-1 does not function in
conjunction with TBP but, instead, potentiates
TFIID/TAF
II-mediated
initiator-dependent transcription from
both linear and supercoiled
templates (see above). Thus, TIC-1 is
different from TAF
II150,
YY1, TFII-I, and USF.
Altogether, these results demonstrate that
a novel initiator-dependent
cofactor activity, TIC-1, is required
for the
TAF
II-mediated transcription stimulatory function of human
TFIID through the initiator region of TATA-containing promoters.

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FIG. 5.
TIC-1 and TIC-2 are different from TFIID, TFII-I, YY1,
and USF. (A) Immunoblot analysis of TIC fractions (see the legend to
Fig. 4F for definitions) for the presence of TFIID components. Specific
antisera against human TAFII150, TAFII80,
and TAFII31 were used to probe a Western blot containing 8 µl of eTFIID (lane 1), 8 µl of native TFIID (MS fraction; lane 2),
and 5- to 10-fold excess (over amounts used in transcription) of TIC-1
(5-µl HS fraction; lane 3), TIC-2 (5-µl HS fraction; lane 4), and
TIC-1/3 (5-µl HS/USA fraction; lane 5). (B) Immunoblot analysis of
purified native TIC and GTF fractions for the presence of TFII-I, YY1,
and USF. Specific antisera against TFII-I, YY1, and USF1 were used to
probe a Western blot containing a 5- to 10-fold excess (over
transcription amounts, as above) of the TIC fractions as indicated (5 µl of each; lanes 1 to 3), and of purified native TFIIA (6-µl Ni
fraction; lane 4), TFIIH (3-µl Q2 fraction; lane 5), and pol II
(4-µl DE fraction; lane 6) used in system A, as well as 1 µl (lane
7) and 5 µl (lane 8) of nuclear extract (NE). (C) Nuclear extracts
immunodepleted of TFII-I. Western blot analysis with specific antiserum
against recombinant TFII-I (anti-TFII-I/A1) of 9 µg of each of normal
nuclear extract (NE; 1.4 µl; lanes 1 and 4), nuclear extract mock
depleted twice on protein A-Sepharose (mock; 2.8 µl; lane 2), and
nuclear extract depleted twice with affinity-purified anti-TFII-I
antibodies (anti-TFII-I/A1) cross-linked to protein A-Sepharose ( TFII-I; 2.8 µl; lane 3). By scanning densitometry, about 98% of
TFII-I was depleted from the extract. (D) Specific immunodepletion of
TFII-I from nuclear extracts does not affect transcription from the
AdML and TdT promoters. Transcription from the supercoiled AdML ( 257
to +33) (ML; 5 fmol; lanes 1 and 2) and TdT ( 1300 to +59) (TdT; 75 fmol; lanes 3 and 4) promoters was analyzed in control mock-depleted
(mock; lanes 1 and 3) and TFII-I-immunodepleted ( TFII-I; lanes 2 and 4) extracts by primer extension as described in the legend to Fig.
3. Autoradiography was about 10 times shorter for lanes 1 and 2 than
for lanes 3 and 4.
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|
TIC-2 and TIC-3 are specifically required for
TAFII-dependent transcription from TATA-less
promoters.
In contrast to what was observed for TATA-containing
promoters, the highly purified assay system (system A) described above does not support TATA-independent transcription from the natural TAFII-dependent initiator-containing TdT core promoter
(Fig. 3D, lane 2), even in the presence of TIC-1 (see below and data
not shown). The only difference between the natural TATA-less TdT core
promoter and the TATA-containing INR+ promoter construct
used in the above studies is the TATA element (Fig. 3E). This suggests
that additional cofactor activities, different from TIC-1, are required
specifically for TAFII-mediated TATA-independent
transcription. To address this possibility, we tested the TdT core
promoter in a less purified assay system (system B), both alone and in
combination with various fractions (Fig. 6A). This system (system B [Materials
and Methods]) contains highly purified eTFIID, native TFIIA,
recombinant TFIIB, recombinant TFIIE, recombinant TFIIF,
and a two-column (P11 0.5/DE 0.3) fraction containing TFIIE, TFIIF,
TFIIH, and pol II, as well as some endogenous TIC-1 activity
(TFIIE/F/H/pol II fraction). This system alone (lane 2) does not
support TdT transcription even when supplemented with either the P11
0.1 fraction (lane 6), the P11 0.3 fraction (lane 7), or a
two-column-purified (P11 0.5/DE 0.12) TIC-1 fraction (lane 8). In
contrast, the two-column (P11 0.85/DE 0.12) TIC-1/3 fraction (lanes 9 to 11) and, to a lesser extent, the P11 0.85/DE 0.3 fraction (lane 12)
can restore transcription in this system. This finding suggests that
transcription from the TdT core promoter requires an activity that is
different from TIC-1 and GTFs, present in the TIC-1/3 fraction and
hereafter called TIC-3. TIC-1 and TIC-3 activities present in the
two-column TIC-1/3 fraction copurify with the USA coactivator fraction
(21) on a subsequent heparin-Sepharose column (Fig. 4F).
However, they are different from the major USA component, the
coactivator PC4 (11, 18), since recombinant PC4 cannot
substitute either for the TIC-1/3 fraction in transcription from the
TdT promoter (Fig. 6A, lanes 3 to 5) or for the TIC-1 activity in
TAFII-dependent initiator function from a TATA-containing promoter (data not shown). TIC-3 is also different from
poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP)/PC1 (22), YY1,
and TFIID since the latter factors are more abundant in the two-column
TFIIE/F/H/pol II fraction of system B that lacks TIC-3 activity than in
the TIC-1/3 (P11 0.85/DE 0.12) fraction (Fig. 6B, lane 4 versus lane
5). TIC-3 also is different from TFII-I and USF, since these latter
factors are absent from the TIC-1/3 (USA) fraction (Fig. 5B, lane 3). Consistent with this finding, immunodepletion of TFII-I from nuclear extracts does not affect basal transcription from the TdT core promoter
(Fig. 5D, lane 3 versus lane 4).

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FIG. 6.
TIC-1 is not sufficient for initiator-directed
transcription from a TATA-less promoter; a novel TIC-3 activity present
in the TIC-1/3 fraction is required. (A) TIC-3 activity is different
from TIC-1 and PC4 and absent in P11 0.1 and P11 0.3 fractions.
Transcription from a supercoiled TdT ( 41 to +59) core promoter was
analyzed in 5 µl of nuclear extract (lane 1) and in system B (lanes 2 to 12), containing purified native TFIIA (Mono Q fraction), recombinant
TFIIB, eTFIID, recombinant TFIIE, recombinant TFIIF, and a two-column
(P11 0.5/DE 0.3) TFIIE/F/H/pol II fraction (see text), either alone
(lane 2) or complemented with recombinant PC4 (100, 200 and 400 ng;
lanes 3 to 5), 500 ng of P11 0.1 (lane 6), P11 0.3 (lane 7), P11 0.5/DE
0.12 (1 µl of TIC-1; lane 8), and P11 0.85/DE 0.3 (lane 12) fractions
or with 500 ng (4.5 µl; lane 9), 220 ng (2 µl; lane 10), and 110 ng
(1 µl; lane 11) of TIC-1/3 (P11 0.85/DE 0.12) fraction. (B) TIC-3
activity does not correlate with the concentration of PARP/PC1, YY1,
and TBP in the TIC-1/3 fraction. Western blot analysis with specific
antisera against human PARP/PC1, YY1, and TBP of 5 µl (lane 1), 1 µl (lane 2), and 0.2 µl (lane 3) of nuclear extract (NE) and 4 µl
of TFIIE/F/H/pol II (P11 0.5/DE 0.3) fraction (the amount used for
system B in panel A; lane 4) and 4.5 µl of TIC-1/3 (P11 0.85/DE 0.12)
fraction (the highest amount of TIC-1/3 added to system B in panel A;
lane 5).
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To reconstitute TFIID/TAF
II-dependent transcription from
the TATA-less TdT promoter in a more purified assay system and to
directly compare the factor requirements for both basal and
activator-dependent
transcription from TATA-dependent and TATA-less
promoters, we
analyzed transcription from promoter constructs
containing either
the TATA-less TdT initiator region or the E1b TATA
box downstream
of five Gal4 binding sites (G5-TdT and G5-E1b) in an
assay system
(system C [Materials and Methods]) reconstituted with
purified
native TFIIA, recombinant TFIIB,
TAF
II150-containing native TFIID
(Mono S fraction
[Fig.
2E, lane 4; Fig.
5A, lane 2]), pol II,
and a
four-column-purified (Mono S) fraction containing native
TFIIE,
TFIIF, and TFIIH (TFIIE/F/H fraction). As expected, and
in
contrast to the detectable basal transcription from the weak
TATA-containing G5-E1B construct, no significant specific basal
transcription is observed from the TATA-less G5-TdT promoter (Fig.
7A, lane 1). Interestingly, and in
contrast to what was observed
in the less purified assay system B (Fig.
6A), the addition of
the TIC-1/3 fraction (which contains both TIC-1
and TIC-3 activities)
cannot restore basal transcription from the
G5-TdT promoter in
this more purified system (Fig.
7A, lane 3; note,
however, the
previously reported basal stimulatory effect of USA
components
in the TIC-1/3 fraction on the E1b promoter). This finding
suggests
that another activity is required, in addition to TIC-1/3, for
TATA-independent transcription from the TdT initiator region and
that
this activity is present in a component of system B. Indeed,
such an
activity, called TIC-2, was found to cofractionate with
the two-column
(P11 0.5/DE52 0.3) TFIIE/F/H/pol II fraction of
system B. TIC-2 from
that fraction was further purified on dsDNA-cellulose
and
heparin-Sepharose (Fig.
4F and Materials and Methods) and
analyzed by immunoblotting to show that it lacks detectable TFIID
(Fig.
5A, lane 4), TFII-I, YY1, and USF (Fig.
5B, lane 2). The
addition of
this four-column-purified TIC-2 (HS) fraction (Fig.
4F) alone cannot
restore specific basal transcription from the
G5-TdT promoter in system
C (Fig.
7A, lane 2; note, however, that
there is a weak overall
increase in nonspecific transcription).
However, in conjunction with
the TIC-1/3 fraction, TIC-2 specifically
promotes basal transcription
from the TATA-less G5-TdT promoter,
whereas it does not influence
TATA-directed transcription from
the G5-E1b template (lane 6 versus
lanes 2 and 3) or from other
TATA-containing promoters that include the
natural TATA-containing
human Hsp70 core promoter (Fig.
7B, lane 1 versus lane 2; see
also below). Importantly, in the presence of the
TIC-1/3 fraction,
which also contains the USA-derived coactivators PC1
to PC4 (and
some TFIID [Fig.
5A, lane 5]), the addition of the strong
activator
Gal4-VP16 efficiently stimulates transcription from the
TATA-containing
G5-E1b construct but is without effect on the TATA-less
G5-TdT
promoter in the absence of TIC-2 (Fig.
7A, lane 3 versus lane
5). The further addition of TIC-2 does not influence the already
high
level of activated transcription from the G5-E1b construct
but
dramatically potentiates activated levels of transcription
from the
G5-TdT promoter (compare lanes 5 and 8). Therefore, basal
transcription
from the TAF
II-dependent TATA-less TdT core promoter
in a
purified system requires both core promoter-specific cofactors
TIC-2
and TIC-3. Moreover, an activator and cognate coactivators
of the USA
(TIC-1/3) fraction cannot compensate for the absolute
requirement for
TIC-2. Demonstration of the involvement of TIC-1
in transcription
from the TdT promoter, although anticipated from
its initiator-specific
function on TATA-containing promoters,
will require the further
purification of TIC-3 from the TIC-1/3
fraction and its separation from
TIC-1.

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FIG. 7.
TIC-2, a TATA-less promoter-specific cofactor required
together with TIC-1/3 for both basal and activated transcription from
the TdT core promoter. (A) TIC-2 and TIC-1/3 are required for basal and
activated transcription from the TATA-less TdT core promoter.
Transcription from supercoiled TATA-less G5-TdT and TATA-containing
G5-E1b promoters (80 fmol) was analyzed in system C, containing
purified native TFIIA (Mono Q fraction), recombinant TFIIB, native
TFIID (Mono S fraction), a four-column native TFIIE/F/H fraction, and
pol II (see Materials and Methods). System C was used alone (lane 1) or
complemented with either 2 µl of TIC-2 (HS) fraction (lane 2), 1 µl
of TIC-1/3 (USA) (HS fraction; lane 3), or 3 pmol of Gal4-VP16 (lane 4)
independently and in different combinations (lanes 5 to 8) as
indicated. The bottom and middle panels are identical exposures (1×)
of experiments run on the same gel. The upper panel is a
fivefold-longer exposure (5×) of the middle panel. (B) Reduced
TIC-2-dependent transcription from the TdT promoter by deletion of
natural TdT downstream promoter sequences between +33 and +59.
Transcription from the supercoiled Hsp, G5-TdT ( 41 to +59), and
G5-TdT+33 ( 41 to +33) constructs was performed in the reconstituted
system C complemented with Gal-VP16 and the TIC-1/3 (USA) fraction, in
either the absence ( ) or presence (+) of TIC-2 (HS) fraction as for
panel A. (C) TIC-2 is a TATA-less promoter-specific cofactor.
Transcription from the supercoiled TATA-less G5- -Pol and G5-TdT+33
constructs and from the TATA-containing G5-INR and
G5-INR+ promoters (see text) was analyzed in the absence
(lane 1) and presence (lane 2) of TIC-2 (HS) fraction as for panel B. Positions of specifically initiated transcripts are indicated for each
promoter.
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To gain more insight into the mechanisms of TIC-2 function, we
analyzed, in the reconstituted TIC-2-dependent system (system
C complemented with USA-TIC-1/3 and Gal4-VP16), the effect of
TIC-2
addition on transcription from different TdT core promoter
mutant
derivatives. The results presented in Fig.
7B show that
a TdT promoter
construct lacking the downstream promoter region
from +33 to +59
(G5-TdT+33), which is required for optimal basal
transcription in
crude nuclear extracts (
19,
38a), is still
responsive to
TIC-2 (lane 5 versus lane 6) but has an activity
lower than that of the
wild-type G5-TdT construct (lane 4 versus
lane 6). Since the
TIC-2-dependent system contains a TIC-1 activity
that is endogenous
to the TIC-1/3 fraction and sufficient for
initiator function in the
context of a TATA-containing promoter
(Fig.
4A and B), this result
suggests a possible function of TIC-2
through sequences downstream of
the initiator (and extending up
to the +33/+59 region). Interestingly,
derivatives (G5-INR

and G5-INR
+) of the
G5-TdT+33 construct containing a consensus TATA element
and
either a mutant (G5-INR

) or a wild-type
(G5-INR
+) initiator element are not stimulated by
TIC-2 in the assay system
described above (Fig.
7C). These results
indicate that TIC-2 is
specifically required in the absence of a
functional TATA element
and are reminiscent of the observation that the
function of the
TdT downstream region in crude nuclear extracts is
important only
in the context of a TATA-less promoter
(
19). Altogether, these
results suggest that TIC-2 may
facilitate the recruitment of TFIID
in conjunction with specific
sequences downstream of the initiator
in TATA-less promoters.
Consistent with an important role of TIC-2
specifically in
TATA-independent transcription, a different initiator-containing
TATA-less core promoter, i.e., the human

-polymerase core promoter,
also requires TIC-2 for optimal TFIID-mediated transcription in
this
reconstituted system (Fig.
7C, G5-

-Pol).
TFIIA is essential for basal and activated TIC-mediated
transcription from a TATA-less promoter.
An important function of
TFIIA is to facilitate the functional recruitment of TFIID to
TATA-containing promoters by competing with specific
TBP-interacting inhibitors and by stabilizing TBP-DNA interactions (reviewed in reference 33). However, in
contrast to transcription from TATA-containing promoters, transcription from the TATA-less TdT promoter is independent of the affinity of TBP
for DNA (20) but requires TICs for functional TFIID
recruitment through an alternative TAFII-dependent pathway
(see above). Therefore, to better understand the
TIC/TAFII-dependent TFIID recruitment pathway at TATA-less
promoters, we tested whether TFIIA is needed for specific
TATA-independent transcription initiation from the TdT core promoter.
Figure 8A shows that specific
immunodepletion of TFIIA from nuclear extracts, which inhibits basal
transcription from the TATA-containing AdML promoter (7),
also inhibits basal transcription from the TdT core promoter (lane 1 versus lane 2) and that addition of TFIIA to the depleted extract
stimulates specific TATA-independent transcription initiation at the
TdT initiator (lane 2 versus lane 3). We further addressed, in the reconstituted TIC-dependent assay system (system C complemented with
TIC-2 and USA-TIC-1/3 fractions), the TFIIA requirement for activator-dependent transcription for both the TATA-containing G5-E1b
construct and the TATA-less G5-TdT promoter (Fig. 8B). Whereas
TFIIA omission from the system reduces Gal-VP16 activator-mediated transcription from the G5-E1b construct (lane 3 versus lane 4) to a
level similar to (or only slightly lower than) the basal level observed
in the absence of Gal-VP16 (lane 2 versus 4), it essentially abolishes
all specific transcription from the TdT core promoter (G5-TdT [compare
lanes 2 and 3 with lane 4]). These results show that TFIIA is crucial
for both basal and activated TATA-independent transcription and is even
more important for basal transcription from the TATA-less TdT core
promoter than for basal transcription from the TATA-containing G5-E1b
construct. These results also demonstrate a novel TFIIA role in TIC-
and TAFII-dependent transcription from initiator-containing
TATA-less promoters that is distinct from a mere stabilization of
TBP-DNA interactions.

View larger version (52K):
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|
FIG. 8.
TFIIA is essential for both basal and
activator-dependent transcription from a TIC- and
TAFII-dependent TATA-less core promoter. (A) Specific
immunodepletion of TFIIA from nuclear extracts (NE) inhibits basal
transcription from the TATA-less TdT promoter. Transcription from the
supercoiled TdT core promoter ( 41 to +59) either in a mock-depleted
nuclear extract (mock; lane 1) or in a nuclear extract depleted of
TFIIA with specific antibodies against TFIIA / -p55 subunit
(7) ( TFIIA; lanes 2 and 3) was analyzed by primer
extension; 1.5 µl of TFIIA (Mono Q fraction) was added to the
TFIIA-depleted extract in lane 3. (B) TFIIA has a general function in
activation and an essential core promoter-selective role in basal
transcription from a TIC- and TAFII-dependent TATA-less
promoter. Transcription from the supercoiled TATA-less G5-TdT and
TATA-containing G5-E1b promoters was analyzed as for panel A, in the
complete system C (lanes 1 to 3) or in system C lacking TFIIA (lane 4)
and in the presence (+) or absence ( ) of Gal-VP16 activator, the
TIC-1/3 (USA) fraction, and the TIC-2 (HS) fraction, as indicated.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Understanding at the molecular level the gene-specific
transcription regulatory role of TAFIIs through core
promoter elements requires the reconstitution in vitro of
TAFII-dependent core promoter-specific transcription
functions with purified components. As a critical first step toward
this goal, we have shown that a highly purified human
TAFII150-containing TFIID complex is not sufficient for core promoter selectivity in a homologous human system reconstituted with all the other highly purified GTFs and pol II. By the further identification of novel TAFII-dependent core
promoter-specific cofactor activities, TICs, we have established the
first in vitro transcription systems reconstituted with purified
components that support the productive core promoter-specific
transcription functions of TFIID through the initiator region of both
TATA-containing and TATA-less core promoters. The differential
requirement for TBP-DNA interactions, TFIIA, TAFIIs,
and TICs as a function of the core promoter structure further suggests
the existence of a diversity of regulatory mechanisms for the control
of transcription initiation at class II genes and points to potential
targets for transcriptional regulators with core promoter-selective
functions.
Cloning of human TAFII150, a stably associated
component of the TFIID complex.
Human TAFII150
shows 46% identity, at the amino acid level, with its
Drosophila homologue and is essentially identical to the
recently described CIF150 (16). However, in contrast to the
latter report, we clearly show that TAFII150 is
stably associated with all human TFIID preparations thus far tested and
comigrates on SDS-gels with TAFII135, explaining why
it has not been observed previously in silver-stained gels of highly
purified eTFIID preparations. The reason for the apparent discrepancy
between our results and the recently published results of Kaufmann et
al., indicating the absence of TAFII150/CIF150 in their
TFIID preparations (16), is not clear but may reflect
differences in cells or cell culture conditions, with corresponding
differences in TFIID or TAFII150 stability during
extract preparation, and/or differences in the sensitivity and
specificity of the antibodies used. Our findings have important
implications for the conclusions of previous protein-DNA interaction
studies that used the human TFIID complex. Indeed, by analogy with
Drosophila TFIID, it now seems likely that human TAFII150 also contributes to the extended interactions
of TAFIIs over the initiator and downstream regions of
initiator-containing promoters and to the resulting increase in
stability of the TFIID-TFIIA complex (10). This is
consistent with cross-linking studies with highly purified human eTFIID
that have shown a TFIIA-induced increase in the cross-linking of 250- and 135-kDa TAFIIs over the AdML initiator region
(25). Because a 135-kDa TAFII was also
cross-linked upstream of the AdML TATA box and because human TAFII135 interacts directly with TFIIA (42), the
135-kDa TAFII positioned over the AdML initiator region may
well be human TAFII150.
TAFII-promoter interactions are not sufficient for the
core promoter-selective functions of TFIID.
We have shown that a
complete set of TAFIIs, including TAFII150,
within the human TFIID complex cannot support either the transcription synergism between TATA and initiator elements or specific
transcription initiation from a TAFII-dependent TATA-less promoter in a highly purified system. This finding indicates that a
simple increase in the affinity of TFIID for the core promoter by
direct TAFII-initiator and TAFII-downstream
region interactions is not sufficient to mediate the productive
transcription function(s) of TFIID/TAFIIs through the
initiator regions of natural TATA-containing and TATA-less promoters.
Consistent with this, and in contrast to synthetic promoter constructs
containing only a TATA box and an initiator element (14),
more complex natural core promoters like the AdML and the
TATA-containing TdT-based promoters (INR+ and
INR
[Fig. 3E]) show TAFII interactions over
the initiator and natural downstream regions in the absence of a
functional initiator element (5, 10, 20, 26a). This is also
consistent with the observation that TAFIIs contact
specific sequences downstream of the initiator in certain promoters
(2, 31). Whatever the role of this core promoter-specific
mode of TAFII-DNA interactions (see also below), our data
indicate that it is not generally sufficient for productive TAFII-dependent core promoter selectivity with all highly
purified GTFs and pol II. In agreement with this observation, we have
partially purified novel core promoter-specific cofactors, TICs, that
potentiate the core promoter-selective functions of TAFIIs
in vitro.
TIC-1, a core promoter-specific cofactor for
TAFII-mediated initiator function.
We have identified
a human TIC-1 activity that restores the transcription synergism
between a TATA box and an initiator element in a highly purified
eTFIID-dependent system. This activity was purified from a HeLa nuclear
extract-derived two-column (P11 0.5/DE 0.12) fraction similar to the
one used previously to functionally identify CIF150 (15,
16). However, the chromatographic properties of TIC-1 on
subsequent columns are different from those of CIF150, and
TAFII150/CIF150 is not detected by immunoblot analyses
in highly active TIC-1 fractions. Furthermore,
TAFII150/CIF150, which we found to be stably
associated within the human TFIID complex, still requires
TIC-1 in a purified system for TATA-dependent initiator function.
Therefore, the previously reported effect of ectopic TAFII150/CIF150 in a crude system (15, 16)
may have reflected the presence of limiting amounts of
TFIID/TAFII150 in the crude fraction used as a
source of TFIID and GTFs and is not indicative of the novel TIC-1
cofactor described here. We have shown that TIC-1 is also
different from several previously characterized gene-specific
transcription factors (YY1, USF, and TFII-I) that have been
implicated in initiator function under particular conditions and
through TFIIA/TAFII-independent pathways (see Results and references 33 and 38). The TdT
initiator element has been shown to stabilize human TFIID (but not TBP)
binding to a TATA-containing promoter in a TFIIA-dependent manner
(10) but, as shown here, still requires TIC-1 for productive
initiator-dependent transcription activity. Therefore, it is possible
that TIC-1 functions after TFIID recruitment, perhaps by favoring the
recruitment of the other GTFs and pol II. Alternatively, TIC-1 may also
function in concert with TFIIA during TFIID recruitment through
interactions with DNA and/or TAFIIs either by simply
further facilitating or stabilizing TFIIA-mediated TFIID-initiator
interactions or by favoring the assembly of a more productive
TFIID-promoter conformation. Surprisingly, although TIC-1 supports
TAFII-mediated initiator function in the context of
TATA-containing promoters, it is not sufficient to promote
initiator-directed transcription from a TAFII-dependent
TATA-less promoter in a purified system. This finding indicates that
additional cofactors are required for TATA-independent initiator-directed transcription that may compensate for the lack of a
TATA element (see below).
TIC-2 and TIC-3 are core promoter-specific cofactors for basal
transcription from TAFII-dependent TATA-less
promoters.
The in vitro study of bona fide
TAFII-mediated TATA-independent transcription is
complicated by the promiscuous and productive binding of TBP to diverse
low-affinity nonconsensus TATA elements. The natural TATA-less
initiator-containing TdT promoter is a good model for the in vitro
analysis of an alternative TATA-independent transcription initiation
pathway because (i) even high concentrations of TBP cannot direct basal
TdT transcription, (ii) TAFIIs are absolutely required
within a TFIID complex for basal transcription, and (iii)
TFIID-mediated transcription from the TdT promoter is largely
independent of specific TBP-DNA interactions (19, 20). That such alternate TATA-independent pathways are of significance in
vivo is further suggested by transfection experiments with major
histocompatibility complex class II gene promoters (reference 1 and references therein). By using the TdT promoter
as a model, we have shown that a system reconstituted with a complete
set of TAFIIs within TFIID, in conjunction with all the
other GTFs and pol II, and even in the presence of TIC-1, cannot
support TAFII-mediated TATA-independent transcription.
Furthermore, we have isolated and partially purified two novel
TATA-less core promoter-specific cofactor activities, called TIC-2 and
TIC-3, that are different from YY1, TFII-I, and USF and that, together (in the presence of TIC-1), restore basal initiator-directed
transcription from the TdT promoter in a purified system. Because
neither TIC-1 nor TIC-2 fractions contain TAFIIs, these
factors are also different from the recently described TFTC
(51). However, the TIC-1/3 (USA) fraction contains
TAFII150, TAFII100,
TAFII80, TAFII31, TAFII20, and
TAFII15 (Fig. 5A and data not shown) in a complex that does
not contain TBP and TAFII250 and is therefore distinct from TFIID (20b) but may be related to TFTC.
Therefore, it is formally possible that TFTC contributes to TIC-3
activity in the cruder TAFII-containing TIC-1/3 (USA)
fraction. Importantly, in a TFIID-dependent system that is
reconstituted with all purified GTFs and pol II and that supports
efficient basal and activated transcription from various
TATA-containing promoters, a strong activator and cognate coactivators
including all other cofactors from the USA fraction cannot alleviate
the requirement for TIC-2 in specific initiator-directed transcription
from the TATA-less TdT core promoter. Therefore, TIC-2 is also
different from all known GTFs and USA coactivators (e.g. PC1 to PC4).
Because activators can only function when all factors required for
basal transcription (i.e., GTFs) are present in addition to pol II, and
since this includes, for the TAFII-dependent TATA-less TdT
promoter, the presence of TIC-2 and TIC-3, these cofactors can be
viewed as core promoter-specific GTFs or basal transcription factors
for the TAFII-dependent TATA-less TdT promoter. Consistent
with this, TIC-2 is also required for specific TFIID-mediated
transcription from the natural TATA-less core promoter region of the
human
-polymerase gene but not from TATA-containing derivatives of
the TdT core promoter (INR+ and INR
constructs [Fig. 3E and 7C]). Therefore, TIC-2 may function to compensate, in the context of TFIID (but not TBP), for the lack of
stable TBP-DNA interactions on TATA-less promoters, in a manner similar and perhaps related to the function of the TdT promoter downstream region (19). However, TIC-2 is most likely not a high-affinity initiator/downstream sequence-specific DNA-binding protein because preincubation of a TIC-2 (HS) fraction with TdT initiator or downstream DNA regions does not inhibit TIC-2-mediated transcription stimulation from a subsequently added TdT core promoter (data not shown). Thus, TIC-2 may facilitate the functional
TAFII-mediated recruitment of TFIID to the initiator and
downstream sequences of the TATA-less TdT core promoter in a manner
more comparable to the function of TFIIA in the stabilization of
TBP-TATA interactions and reorganization of the TFIID-promoter
complex on TATA-containing promoters (references 25
and 33 and references therein).
An essential core promoter-specific function for TFIIA in
transcription from TAFII-dependent TATA-less
promoters.
We have shown that TFIIA plays a crucial role in
conjunction with TAFIIs and TICs in basal and activated
transcription from the TAFII-dependent TATA-less TdT core
promoter. Moreover, our data show that TFIIA is more important for
basal (activator-independent) transcription from the
initiator-dependent TdT core promoter than from the TATA-containing E1b
construct. This finding indicates that TFIIA, like TAFIIs
and TICs, has core promoter-specific functions. This observation is
consistent with (i) the selective stimulation by TFIIA of
TFIID-mediated but not TBP-directed transcription in purified
systems that allow efficient TBP-TATA interactions (reviewed in
reference 33), (ii) the selective
initiator-dependent TFIIA-mediated stabilization of TFIID-DNA
interactions on TATA-containing promoters (10), (iii) the
TFIIA-dependent rearrangement of TAFIIs over the initiator
region of the AdML core promoter (25), and (iv) the
requirement for TFIIA in conjunction with TAFIIs in
differential transcription from the tandem TATA-containing
Drosophila Adh core promoters (13). Moreover, our
demonstration of an absolute requirement for TFIIA in addition to
TAFIIs and TICs for specific initiator-directed transcription from the TATA-less TdT core promoter indicates a novel
role for TFIIA, perhaps related to the function of TFIIA in
facilitating TFIID/TAFIIs recognition of the initiator
region of TATA-containing promoters described above but independent of TBP-TATA interactions. This provides further evidence for important mechanistic differences, including different rate limiting steps and/or
alternative pathways, in the formation of transcription competent
preinitiation complexes at class II core promoters.
A parallel between TAFII functions in gene-specific
activation and core promoter selectivity.
It is interesting that
the requirement for TAFIIs in gene transcription is not
general either for activated (24, 26, 35, 47) or for basal
(references 33 and 46 and
references therein) transcription. It therefore appears that
TAFIIs play a critical role through alternative pathways in
both gene-specific activation and core promoter-specific functions. Our
results further suggest that this parallel can be extended to the
mechanisms of TFIID/TAFII function in vitro. Indeed,
TAFII-activator and TAFII-core promoter interactions result in an increased recruitment of TFIID and/or stability of the TFIID-promoter complex (33, 46; see
also the introduction). However, in contrast to TBP-dependent basal transcription, both of these TAFII-mediated processes
require TFIIA and additional cofactors, i.e., coactivators (reviewed in references 5, 12, and 52) or core
promoter-specific cofactors (TICs [this report]), for productive
transcription stimulation. The mechanisms by which those cofactors
potentiate TAFII-mediated functions are still largely
unknown. It is possible that both TAFII-dependent activator
function and basal TAFII-mediated core promoter-specific
transcription stimulation are intimately linked processes at particular
genes. This would be consistent with the previously observed core
promoter-specific activity of certain activators in vitro and in vivo
(6, 9, 23, 36, 49). In accord with a potential role of
TAFIIs in selective transcription of a specific group of
genes, the levels and activity of TAFIIs are regulated
during the cell cycle and TAFIIs play an important role in
the regulation of cell growth and cell cycle progression by controlling
the transcription of G1 and B-type cyclin genes, many of
which have a TATA-less core promoter structure (references 24,
34, 35, 41, 48, and 48a and references
therein). The novel TIC- and TAFII-dependent in vitro
transcription systems described here will be useful both for the
further characterization of TICs and for the analysis of the role that
TAFIIs (and TFIIA) play in core promoter selectivity and in
specific transcription of cell cycle-regulatory genes.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Z. F. Burton for human RAP30 and RAP74 bacterial
expression vectors, M. Guermah for TAFII31 antibodies and
for sharing unpublished results, T. C. Gutjahr for anti-TFII-I
antibodies and for TFII-I-immunodepleted nuclear extracts, T. Oelgeschläger for an independent f:TFIID preparation, and J. Fu
for excellent technical assistance. We also thank T. Oelgeschläger, C. Parada, and M. Teichmann for helpful comments
on the manuscript.
This work was supported by NIH grant CA42567 to R.G.R. E.M. was
supported by a fellowship from The Charles H. Revson/Norman and Rosita
Winston Foundation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Ave., New York, NY 10021. Phone: (212) 327-7600. Fax: (212) 327-7949. E-mail: roeder{at}rockvax.rockefeller.edu.
Present address: Laboratory of Molecular Embryology, National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Present address: Dupont Agricultural Products, Stine-Haskell
Research Center, Newark, DE 19714.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1998, p. 6571-6583, Vol. 18, No. 11
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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