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Molecular and Cellular Biology, December 1999, p. 7972-7982, Vol. 19, No. 12
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Translation of Maternal TATA-Binding Protein mRNA Potentiates
Basal but Not Activated Transcription in Xenopus Embryos
at the Midblastula Transition
Gert Jan C.
Veenstra,1
Olivier H. J.
Destrée,2 and
Alan P.
Wolffe1,*
Laboratory for Molecular Embryology, National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland
20892,1 and Hubrecht Laboratory,
Netherlands Institute for Developmental Biology, 3584 CT Utrecht,
The Netherlands2
Received 11 June 1999/Returned for modification 3 August
1999/Accepted 7 September 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Early embryonic development in Xenopus laevis is
characterized by transcriptional repression which is relieved at the
midblastula stage (MBT). Here we show that the relative abundance of
TATA-binding protein (TBP) increases robustly at the MBT and that the
mechanism underlying this increase is translation of maternally
stored TBP RNA. We show that TBP is rate-limiting in egg extract under
conditions that titrate nucleosome assembly. Precocious
translation of TBP mRNA in Xenopus embryos facilitates
transcription before the MBT, without requiring TBP to be prebound to
the promoter before injection. This effect is transient in the absence
of chromatin titration and is sustained when chromatin is titrated.
These data show that translational regulation of TBP RNA contributes to
limitations on the transcriptional capacity before the MBT. Second, we
examined the ability of trans-acting factors to contribute
to promoter activity before the MBT. Deletion of cis-acting
elements does not affect histone H2B transcription in egg extract, a
finding indicative of limited trans-activation. Moreover,
in the context of the intact promoter, neither the transcriptional
activator Oct-1, nor TBP, nor TFIID enable transcriptional activation
in vitro. HeLa cell extract, however, reconstitutes activated
transcription in mixed extracts. These data suggest a deficiency in egg
extract cofactors required for activated transcription. We show
that the capacity for activated H2B transcription is gradually acquired at the early gastrula transition. This transition occurs well after the
blastula stage when the basal transcription machinery can first be
complemented with TBP.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The early embryonic development of
vertebrate and many invertebrate species is characterized by a period
during which the embryonic genome is transcriptionally silent. The
developmental stage at which the major transcriptional activity starts
ranges from the 2-cell stage in the mouse to the cycle 9 to 14 blastoderm stage in Drosophila melanogaster. In nematodes
and amphibians the major activation of the embryonic genome starts
after 7 cell cycles (in C. elegans, i.e., 90 to 125 cells)
and 12 cell cycles (in Xenopus laevis, i.e., ca. 4,000 cells), respectively (for reviews, see references 4,
36, and 62). In Xenopus, the gradual activation of the embryonic genome coincides with the acquisition of cell motility and the loss of cell cycle synchrony. These three coinciding transitions are collectively referred to as the
midblastula transition (MBT) (33, 34).
Newport and Kirschner (33, 34) suggested that both cell
cycle lengthening and the relief of transcriptional repression at the
MBT are regulated by stoichiometric titration of an inhibitor by the
exponentially increasing amount of DNA in the embryo. In partial
constriction experiments, only half of the egg inherits a nucleus. Only
the nucleated side divides until a nucleus incidentally moves to the
uncleaved half of the embryo. This results in twin embryos, of which
the retarded-half embryo has a delayed MBT. This timing suggests that
the nucleus/cytoplasm ratio regulates the MBT. Experiments with
polyspermic eggs, containing an increased number of nuclei, were in
line with this hypothesis (33). Similarly, transcriptional
repression of a class III gene was found to be mediated by a low
DNA/cytoplasm ratio, while microinjection of nonspecific DNA activated
the promoter precociously (34). Cell cycle lengthening is
not causal for transcription activation, since cell cycle arrest by
aphidicolin, by cycloheximide, or by a proteolysis-resistant mutant of
cyclin B does not relieve transcriptional repression (38).
Replication-coupled chromatin assembly correlates tightly with and is
causal for repression of transcription in oocytes (2), suggesting that the stoichiometrically titrated inhibitor proposed by
Newport and Kirschner (33, 34) involves one or more
components of chromatin. In Drosophila, however, it has been
shown that titration of a specific transcriptional repressor
contributes to activation of the embryonic genome (39, 61).
In addition, enhancers are inactive prior to zygotic gene activation in
the mouse, which, besides other mechanisms involving chromatin
remodeling, is attributed to a coactivator not being available until
the activation of the genome (reviewed in references
26 and 36). This prompts the question whether repression of the embryonic genome in
Xenopus is regulated at different levels, perhaps
involving chromatin-mediated repression, deficiencies in the
transcription machinery, and the presence of specific repressors.
TATA-binding protein (TBP) has been identified as a molecule that is
able to facilitate transcription before the MBT if two conditions are
met (3, 37, 38): (i) recombinant TBP protein is preincubated
with the promoter template prior to injection into embryos, and (ii) a
state of incomplete chromatin assembly is present. Such an immature
chromatin structure is observed at early time points after injection of
a promoter template and after coinjection of a large amount of
nonspecific DNA that titrates chromatin assembly. If recombinant TBP
protein is injected into the embryo separately from the promoter
template, no transcription is observed, suggesting that a dynamic
competition between chromatin and TBP accounts for the regulation of
transcription before and after the MBT. In this view, chromatin
prevents the access of transcription factors, such as TBP, to promoter
DNA (38).
In addition, transcriptional activators seem to be impaired in their
function. The artificial activator GAL4-VP16 was found to depress
chromatin and activate transcription under conditions when endogenous
activators could not (3), whereas in another study the same
activator could bind its cis-acting element but failed to
activate transcription (37), thus behaving more like endogenous activators under these circumstances.
In this report we explore the mechanisms underlying global repression
of transcription before the MBT and its relief thereafter. We report
that TBP protein is strongly upregulated at the MBT and that this is
mediated by translation of previously masked maternal TBP RNA.
Employing egg extracts to assay the pre-MBT basal transcription
machinery under conditions that titrate nucleosome assembly
effectively, we found that TBP stimulates transcription robustly,
providing evidence that TBP is rate limiting before the MBT. Moreover,
we found that if TBP RNA is translated precociously in
Xenopus embryos, preincubation of TBP protein with the
promoter template is not necessary for stimulation of transcription
before the MBT. In addition, we explore the mechanistic basis of the absence of activated transcription before the MBT. Using the egg extract in vitro transcription system, we found that the inactivity of
trans-acting transcription factors is due to a deficiency in the transcription machinery. We show here that this deficiency exists
in vivo during a window of time from the onset of basal transcription
at the MBT to the subsequent start of gastrulation a few hours later.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Constructs.
The pH2B-Luc plasmid was described by Schilthuis
(42) and contains the histone H2B.1 promoter of the
Xenopus histone gene cluster Xl-hi-118 (12),
fused to the luciferase reporter gene. pH2B-TATA-Luc was obtained by
digestion of pH2B-Luc with SphI and religation of the
plasmid. For microinjection experiments, capped xTBP (16)
RNA was synthesized from linearized pSP64A-xTBP by using an in vitro
RNA synthesis kit (Ambion).
DNA topology assays.
In vitro transcription reaction samples
(see below), and embryo or oocyte homogenates were deproteinized for
2 h at 55°C with proteinase K (100 µg/ml, final
concentration). The DNA was phenol extracted, ethanol precipitated, and
resuspended in 10 µl of TE containing 100 µg of RNase A per ml.
After incubation at 37°C for 1 h, 2 µl of 80% glycerol was
added, and the DNA was loaded on a 1% agarose gel containing 1× TPE
(40 mM Tris base, 30 mM NaH2PO4, 1 mM EDTA) and
chloroquine. One-dimensional chloroquine gels were run for 18 h at
3 V/cm in 90 µg of chloroquine per ml. Two-dimensional chloroquine
gels were run in 4 and 30 µg of chloroquine per ml for the first and
second dimensions, respectively. After capillary transfer of the DNA to
a Hybond N-Plus membrane (Amersham), the Southern blot was probed with
radiolabeled (Rediprime; Amersham) plasmid-specific probes according to
standard procedures.
Density gradient centrifugation and Northern blotting.
Extract from 200 oocytes or embryos was fractionated on a Nycodenz
(Nycomed, Oslo, Norway) density gradient, as described previously
(31, 50, 52). Fractions were deproteinized by phenol-chloroform extraction. The RNA was recovered by ethanol precipitation and analyzed by Northern blotting by using Hybond N-Plus
(Amersham) membranes and Hybrisol I (Oncor) for blocking and
hybridization solution. RNA isolated from a single fraction was loaded
on the gel for the Nycodenz gradient blots, whereas 30 µg of total
RNA per sample was loaded for the developmental Northern blot.
Extracts for Western blotting and luciferase assays.
Embryos
were homogenized in 4 volumes of low-salt whole-cell extract buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5; 70 mM KCl; 1 mM EDTA; 20% glycerol; 5 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT); 1 µg of leupeptin, pepstatin A, and aprotinin
per ml). Homogenates were centrifuged at 15,000 × g for 5 to 10 min at 4°C. Subsequently, the supernatant was frozen on dry ice and
stored at
80°C for later use.
Western blot analysis and antibodies.
Two embryo equivalents
of extract were loaded per lane. For early embryonic extracts this
results in even amounts of total protein loaded per lane. Western blot
analysis was performed by using Hybond-ECL (Amersham) membranes and an
enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) detection kit (Pierce). The following
antibodies were used: anti-TBP (58C9 [Santa Cruz Biotechnologies] at
1:4,000), anti-RNAPolII (8WG16 [BabCO] at 1:2,000), anti-TFIIB (C18
[Santa Cruz Biotechnologies] at 1:500), and anti-TFIIF RAP74 (C18 at
1:500).
Luciferase assays.
Luciferase assays were performed by using
a luciferase detection kit (Pharmingen) and a Monolight 2010 luminometer (Analytical Luminescence Laboratory). In all luciferase
assays, one embryo equivalent of extract was assayed, representing the
average activity of 20 to 30 embryos in the homogenate. Experiments
were performed in triplicate with different batches of embryos derived
from different frogs. For assaying the fold activation, the activity of
the full-length histone H2B promoter (H2B) was normalized against that
of the H2B core promoter ("TATA"). DNA loading per embryo was
checked by Southern blot analysis.
In vitro transcription extracts.
Egg extracts (low-speed
supernatants) were prepared as previously described by Blow
(7). In vitro transcription experiments were performed by
using either activated or unactivated low-speed egg extracts; similar
results were obtained, irrespective of the type of egg extract used.
HeLa cell extracts were prepared as described previously
(30).
In vitro transcription analysis and primer extension.
Primer
extension of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) RNA and histone H4
RNA isolated from embryos or oocytes was described previously
(27). Conditions for in vitro transcription analysis were
essentially as described by Toyoda and Wolffe (55). For standard 25-µl reactions, 600 ng (160 fmol) of pH2B-Luc or
pH2B-TATA-Luc and 1 µl of egg extract (60 µg of protein) or 1 to 5 µl of HeLa cell extract (30 to 150 µg of protein) was used.
Reactions contained 0.1 to 1 ng (0.2 to 2 fmol) of synthetic Luc
RNA, which served as internal standard for primer extension.
Transcription reactions were incubated at 23°C for 60 min. The
purification of HeLa TFIID (D-TFIID) and the expression, purification,
and activity of human recombinant TBP, TFIIB, TFIIE, and TFIIF were as
described before (53, 54). To verify the RNA polymerase II
(Pol II) dependence of histone H2B transcription in egg extract, 0.25 µl of
-amanitin (1 mg/ml in dimethyl sulfoxide [DMSO]) was
included in the 25-µl transcription reactions (final concentration,
10 µg/ml). Control reactions in these cases contained 0.25 µl of
DMSO. The primer used for primer extension of luciferase RNA was a
32P-end-labeled oligonucleotide complementary to Luc RNA
(Luc2, 5'-ATG TTC ACC TCG ATA TGT GCA TCT GTA AA-3'). This primer was annealed to the RNA for 45 min at 55°C in 12 µl of annealing buffer (5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0; 0.2 mM EDTA; 160 mM KCl). The tubes were chilled on ice for 10 min. Subsequently, 28 µl of ice-cold RT-Mix (containing 10 µl of 4× SRT buffer [80 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.4; 10 mM
MgCl2; 400 µg of bovine serum albumin per ml; 40 mM
DTT], 1.65 µl of actinomycin D [1 mg/ml], 6 µl of
deoxynucleoside triphosphate mix [2 mM concentrations of dATP, dCTP,
dGTP, and dTTP], 0.25 µl of RNase inhibitor [Boehringer Mannheim;
40 U/ml], 0.5 µl of Superscript reverse transcriptase [Gibco BRL;
200 U/ml]) was added, and the tubes were incubated for 60 min at
42°C. The single-stranded DNA was phenol extracted, precipitated with
ethanol, dissolved in 5 µl of formamide loading buffer, and loaded
onto a 5% acrylamide (19:1) sequencing gel containing 8 M urea. Gels
were run for 75 min at 70 W, fixed (10% methanol, 8% acetic acid),
and dried under vacuum at 80°C. Quantitation of primer extension
products was performed with a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
Normalization of cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter activity with H4
signals was performed by calculating the average H4 signal for each
developmental stage. The relative normalization factor for each lane is
the ratio of H4 signal to the stage-specific H4 average. This corrects for the developmental regulation of histone H4 mRNA.
 |
RESULTS |
TBP abundance increases at the MBT.
To examine the possibility
that developmental regulation of components of the basal transcription
machinery contributes to activation of the embryonic genome, extracts
from staged embryos were prepared and subjected to Western blot
analysis (Fig. 1A). TBP is relatively
abundant during gastrulation and neurulation (stages 10 to 17), whereas
the protein is barely detectable during early cleavage (stage 2) or in
oocytes. TBP levels increase between cleavage and early blastula stages
(stage 61/2) and increase further at the midblastula stage
(between stage 8 and 9), peaking at stage 9 at the onset of zygotic
transcription, well before gastrulation commences.

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FIG. 1.
Regulation of TBP during embryonic development. (A)
Western blot analysis of TBP, the large subunit of RNA Pol II, the
RAP74 subunit of TFIIF, and TFIIB. Developmental stages are described
by Nieuwkoop and Faber (35). The MBT occurs between stages 8 and 9. (B) Northern blot analysis of TBP RNA. The position of TBP RNA
is indicated with an arrowhead; the position of the 18S RNA is
indicated with an asterisk. The lower panel shows 28S RNA as detected
with methylene blue staining of the Northern blot. (C) Northern blot
analysis of TBP RNA in fractions of oocyte (top panel) and embryonic
(middle panel) extracts subjected to density gradient centrifugation.
The fractions containing rRNA (fractions 8 to 12) were identified by
methylene blue staining of the blot (bottom panel). Fraction 7 does not
contain functional ribosomes, as indicated by the absence of 28S RNA
(compare references 31, 50, and
52). (D) Quantitation of TBP protein and TBP RNA
abundance during early embryogenesis (derived from panels A and B). TBP
protein abundance was quantitated by using multiple ECL exposures of
the Western blot to ensure quantitation in the linear range of film.
Due to the limited linearity of the ECL, the magnitude of regulation of
TBP abundance may be larger than what is shown here. Quantitation of
Northern blot signals was performed by using a PhosphorImager.
|
|
We compared the expression profile exhibited by TBP with that of other
components of the basal transcription machinery. The
large
subunit of RNA Pol II (Pol IIa) is hardly detectable in
oocytes;
however, protein levels are markedly higher in embryos,
presumably
reflecting translation of maternally stored RNA upon
maturation
of the oocyte. During embryogenesis RNA Pol II levels
show only a
moderate increase at the MBT. Coinciding with the
MBT, however, is the
appearance of the hyperphosphorylated form
of Pol II (IIo), a finding
consistent with the unphosphorylated
and phosphorylated forms of RNA
Pol II being the enzymes involved
in preinitiation and transcript
elongation respectively (reviewed
by Dahmus [
11] and
Shilatifard [
43]).
We asked the question whether the temporal regulation of TBP (and to a
lesser extent Pol II) is a general phenomenon for basal
transcription
factors during embryogenesis. This is not the case.
Two other basal
transcription factors, TFIIB and TFIIF RAP74,
appear to be expressed
constitutively during embryogenesis (Fig.
1A). These results suggest
that the ratio of TBP and, to a lesser
degree Pol II, to other basal
transcription factors undergoes
major transitions during early
embryonic
development.
Translational regulation of maternal TBP RNA.
TBP protein
starts accumulating at stage 61/2, i.e., before the onset of
embryonic transcription (Fig. 1A). We therefore hypothesized that this
protein is translated from maternal TBP mRNA. To examine this
possibility, RNA was isolated from staged embryos and subjected to
Northern blot analysis. Using a Xenopus TBP probe, a single TBP mRNA of approximately 2,000 nucleotides was detected (Fig. 1B).
This mRNA is relatively abundant in oocytes and declines in abundance
during early embryogenesis, thereby exhibiting a temporal profile
complementary to that of the protein it encodes (Fig. 1D), which
suggests a shorter half-life for the TBP message when TBP protein is accumulating.
To examine the possibility that TBP is translated from maternal stores
of RNA, ribonucleoproteins from oocytes and staged
embryos were
fractionated by density gradient centrifugation.
Fractions were
collected from these gradients, and the RNA isolated
from these
fractions was subjected to Northern blot analysis.
A significant
fraction of the TBP RNA from stage 9 embryos is
associated with
ribosomes (Fig.
1C), a finding indicative of TBP
RNA being translated.
In contrast, TBP RNA from oocytes is predominantly
found in the
nonribosomal messenger RNP (mRNP) fraction, indicative
of translational
masking (Fig.
1C [
52]). The total signal corresponding
to TBP RNA is less in stage 9 embryos compared to oocytes, which
is
consistent with the relative RNA levels observed in oocytes
and embryos
(Fig.
1B). Fractionation of RNPs from cleavage-stage
embryos (stage 4)
shows an intermediate level of association with
mRNPs and ribosomes
(data not shown). This is consistent with
the gradual increase in TBP
protein levels observed during embryogenesis
(Fig.
1A; see also
reference
6). We therefore conclude that
TBP is
translated from maternal stores of RNA. This is a process
that starts
before the MBT and that results in maximal TBP levels
at the onset of
transcription at the
MBT.
TBP is rate limiting for basal transcription in egg extract.
TBP stimulates RNA Pol II-dependent transcription in pre-MBT embryos
(3, 38). However, this stimulation was found to be dependent
on two experimental conditions: (i) preincubation of recombinant TBP
protein with the promoter template prior to injection into embryos and
(ii) a state of incomplete chromatin assembly. Such an immature
chromatin structure is observed at early time points after injection of
the promoter template and after coinjection of a large amount of
nonspecific DNA that titrates chromatin assembly.
The requirement to have TBP protein prebound to the promoter before
injection into embryos suggested that a potential mechanism
for this
phenomenon involves a dynamic competition between TBP
and histones. Our
finding that TBP is regulated at the level of
its translation from
maternally stored RNA, such that TBP protein
levels are very low before
the MBT (Fig.
1), raised the possibility
that TBP may be rate limiting
for the basal transcription machinery.
In the latter model, the
requirement for interfering with pre-MBT
chromatin assembly reflects a
separate repression mechanism that
is superimposed on top of the TBP
regulation.
To examine this possibility, we employed a developmentally relevant in
vitro transcription extract. Extracts from
Xenopus eggs
appear to support low levels of transcription that is RNA
Pol II
dependent (Fig.
2A). This reveals the
presence of a complete
and active basal transcription machinery, a
result consistent
with published data (
38). The difference
with regard to transcription
between the egg extract and the egg from
which the extract is
made is explained by the titration of chromatin
assembly by excess
DNA template in the in vitro transcription assay.
Consistent with
this, two-dimensional chloroquine gels, which allow the
resolution
of DNA topoisomers according to the extent to which they are
supercoiled,
reveal that the plasmid containing the promoter template
is in
a relaxed state comparable to plasmid relaxed in vitro by
recombinant
topoisomerase I. This confirms the absence of detectable
chromatin
assembly under these reaction conditions (Fig.
2B).

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FIG. 2.
RNA Pol II-dependent transcription in egg extract. (A)
Both low-speed supernatant (LSS) and high-speed supernatant (HSS) egg
extract contain a functional transcription machinery (lanes 1 and 2)
that is dependent on RNA Pol II as assessed by sensitivity to low
levels (10 µg/ml) of -amanitin (lanes 3 and 4). Except for lane 2, all in vitro transcription analysis in this study was performed with
LSS extract. "H2B" indicates the position primer extension products
corresponding to transcripts specifically initiated from a
Xenopus histone H2B promoter, and the asterisk indicates the
position of the primer extension product of synthetic Luc RNA, which
was used as internal standard. Incubation of 0.6 µg of pH2B-Luc (160 fmol of DNA) with 1 µl of LSS egg extract under the conditions
described in Materials and Methods results in the synthesis of ca. 0.2 to 0.5 fmol of correctly initiated transcript. (B) Two-dimensional gel
electrophoresis in the presence of chloroquine. Panel B1 shows the DNA
topology under standard egg extract in vitro transcription conditions,
panel B2 shows a control sample containing nucleosomes, panel B3
explains the hybridization signals ("Rxd," "Scl," "Lnr,"
and "NC" represent, respectively, relaxed, supercoiled, linearized,
and nicked pH2B-Luc plasmid), panel B4 shows the positions of plasmid
DNA treated with recombinant topoisomerase I (resulting in nicked and
relaxed DNA), panel B5 shows the topology of plasmid as isolated from
Escherichia coli, and panel B6 shows the position of
linearized pH2B-Luc plasmid. The estimated average number of supercoils
of the DNA in the in vitro transcription reaction, based on quantitated
PhosphorImager area profiles of resolved DNA isomers, is 3.9. The
uncertainty in the number of supercoils as a result of a dynamic
equilibrium between supercoiling (writhe) and winding (twist) is
estimated to be ±2 (see panel B4).
|
|
We investigated whether TBP or other basal transcription factors can
stimulate transcription in this system. Addition of purified
TBP to egg
extract appears to stimulate transcription from a
Xenopus histone H2B promoter 40- to 50-fold (Fig.
3A and
F). We examined
whether only TBP could
stimulate H2B transcription in egg extract
by the addition of several
other human basal transcription factors
(i.e., TFIIB, TFIIE, and TFIIF)
in amounts up to twice the amount
which saturates basal transcription
in a reconstituted system
(
23). TFIIB, TFIIE, and TFIIF,
however, do not affect the levels
of transcript synthesized by egg
extract (Fig.
3B). This stimulation
of transcription by TBP is not an
artifact of in vitro transcription,
since transcription driven by HeLa
cell extract is not affected
by exogenous TBP (Fig.
3C). Likewise, no
stimulation of transcription
from a
Xenopus histone H2B
promoter is observed in oocytes upon
TBP overexpression (Fig.
3C),
providing additional evidence that
TBP rate limitation is not a general
phenomenon. To rule out the
possibility that TBP was competing with an
undetectable number
of nucleosomes, 3 µg of nonspecific DNA was added
to each reaction
containing two egg equivalents of egg extract, and the
effect
of TBP was tested on transcription. Nonspecific DNA does not
affect
transcription in the presence or absence of TBP (data not
shown).

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FIG. 3.
TBP is rate limiting for basal transcription, but
exogenous TBP is not sufficient to support activated transcription in
egg extract. (A) Transcription from the histone H2B promoter in egg
extract in the absence of exogenous TBP (lane 1) and in the presence of
9.5, 19, 28.5, or 38 ng of TBP (lanes 2 to 5). (B) The basal factors
TFIIB, TFIIE, and TFIIF do not stimulate egg extract transcription.
Transcription in the absence of exogenous basal factors (lane 1), in
the presence of 12.5, 25, or 50 ng of TFIIB (lanes 2 to 4), in the
presence of 22.5, 45, or 90 ng of TFIIE (lanes 5 to 7), and in the
presence of 50, 100, or 200 ng of TFIIF (lanes 8 to 10). A total of 25 ng of TFIIB, 45 ng of TFIIE, and 100 ng of TFIIF is sufficient to
saturate basal transcription in a reconstituted system (23).
(C) TBP does neither stimulate nor inhibit transcription in HeLa cell
extract or Xenopus oocytes. Lane 1, histone H2B
transcription in the absence of TBP; lane 2, histone H2B transcription
in the presence of 38 ng of TBP (larger amounts of TBP also do not
stimulate [data not shown]); lanes 3 and 4, transcription from the
H2B promoter in oocytes with or without 0.5 ng of TBP RNA injected into
the cytoplasm 3 h before injection of the DNA (compare with Fig.
4). Primer extension of endogenous histone H4 was used as a control for
RNA loading in this experiment. (D) trans-Activation was
assayed under various circumstances by comparing the activities of the
core histone H2B promoter (TATA) and the full-length histone H2B
promoter. Lanes 1 to 5, transcription from basal H2B promoter; lanes 6 to 10, transcription from full-length H2B promoter. (E) Functional
deficiency in egg extract affecting activated transcription.
trans-Activation was assayed under various circumstances by
comparing the activities of the core histone H2B promoter (H2B-TATA,
lanes 1 to 4 and lanes 9 to 11) and the full-length histone H2B
promoter (H2B, lanes 5 to 8 and lanes 12 to 14). Transcription driven
by 1 µl of egg extract mixed with 0 µl (lanes 1 and 5), 1 µl
(lanes 2 and 6), 2 µl (lanes 3 and 7), and 3.5 µl (lanes 4 and 8)
of HeLa cell extract. Lanes 9 to 14 show the extent to which
transcription is supported by the respective amounts of HeLa cell
extract alone. Mixed extract and HeLa cell extract, but not egg extract
alone, support activated transcription. (F) Quantitation of three TBP
titration experiments, including the experiment shown in panel A. (G)
Graphic representation of the experiment show in panel E. The levels of
transcription obtained were related to the level obtained with egg
extract, which was arbitrarily set at 1. Addition of 0.5 µl of HeLa
cell extract to 1 µl of egg extract resulted in levels of
transcription that were approximately twofold lower than those observed
when 1 µl of HeLa extract was added to 1 µl of egg extract;
activation was less than threefold when 0.5 µl of HeLa cell extract
was used. Optimal, activated transcription is achieved when 1 µl of
HeLa extract is added to 1 µl of egg extract, as shown in the graph.
Symbols: , basal transcription driven by egg extract mixed with
increasing amounts of HeLa extract; , transcriptional activity of
the full-length promoter in the presence of egg extract mixed with
increasing amounts of HeLa extract; , basal transcription driven by
increasing amounts of HeLa extract; , transcriptional activity of
the full-length promoter in the presence of increasing amounts of HeLa
extract.
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|
In conclusion, addition of TBP stimulates a rate-limiting step for
transcription in egg extract in the absence of detectable
chromatin
assembly and independent of the titration of potentially
undetectable
low amounts of nucleosome assembly. This indicates
that titration of
chromatin assembly and the complementation of
the basal transcription
machinery with exogenous TBP represent
two separate steps in relieving
pre-MBT constraints on basal
transcription.
TBP does not relieve a deficiency for activated transcription in
vitro.
As complementation of the transcription machinery of the
egg with TBP protein boosts the transcriptional capacity, we wondered whether this experimental situation would allow cross-talk between transcriptional activators and the basal transcription machinery in the
egg extract in vitro transcription system.
Histone H2B promoters contain an Oct-1 binding site (
14,
28,
46,
48,
59) directly upstream of the TATA box that
contributes to the
regulation of this promoter in vivo (
14,
17,
22,
28). Oct-1
is one of the founding members of the
POU domain family of
transcriptional regulators (
20,
41,
58),
and is maternally
derived in
Xenopus (
21,
22). To determine
whether
or not Oct-1 contributes to histone H2B promoter activity
in egg
extracts, Oct-1 was depleted from egg extracts by using
a monoclonal
antibody (
56), and the effect of Oct-1 depletion
on H2B
promoter activity was tested in the absence or presence
of exogenous
TBP. Depletion of more than 90% of Oct-1, however,
does not affect
histone H2B promoter activity in egg extracts
(data not shown).
Therefore, the contribution of upstream promoter
sequences was
determined by using a core promoter and a full-length
histone H2B
promoter construct (designated, respectively, TATA
and H2B). The TATA
construct contains an initiator element and
a TATA box but lacks the
Oct-1 and CCAAT motifs present in the
full-length histone H2B promoter.
Since the TATA construct lacks
any
cis-acting elements
except those recognized by the basal transcription
machinery, we
operationally define the activity of the TATA construct
as basal
transcription. The degree to which transcriptional activators
contribute to overall promoter activity is given by the ratio
of H2B to
TATA promoter activity (fold
activation).
The TATA and H2B constructs appear to be equally active in egg extract
(Fig.
3D, lanes 1 and 6), indicating that activated
transcription is
not supported by egg extract whereas it is supported
by HeLa cell
extract (lanes 4 and 9). TBP stimulates only basal
transcription in egg
extract and does not influence basal and
activated transcription in
HeLa cell extract (lanes 5 and 10).
Activated transcription is known to
involve TBP-associated factors
(reviewed by Burley and Roeder
[
15] and Goodrich et al. [
10]),
and
since HeLa cell extract supports activated transcription,
we addressed
the question whether HeLa TFIID (
54), a functional
complex
containing TBP and TBP-associated factors, would confer
activated
transcription to egg extract. HeLa TFIID, in contrast
to TBP,
moderately stimulates basal egg extract transcription,
about two-fold
(Fig.
3D, lane 3). In part this is explained by
the relatively low
concentration of TBP in the HeLa TFIID fraction
(Western blot analysis
[not shown]). However, the addition of
still more TFIID did not
result in a further increase of transcription.
The stimulation of egg
extract transcription by TFIID by using
a full-length promoter was
slightly stronger than the stimulation
of basal transcription but never
exceeded 1.5-fold activation,
whereas HeLa cell extract, containing
similar levels of TBP as
assessed by Western blot analysis, supports 3- to 5-fold activation
(Fig.
3D, compare lanes 3 to 5 and lanes 8 to
10).
The transcription machinery of the egg, as recruited by the histone H2B
promoter, appears to be restricted in its ability
to support activated
transcription. Since the inability to support
activated H2B
transcription is not relieved by either TBP or TFIID,
it represents a
second constraint on the transcription machinery,
one distinct from the
constraint on basal transcription by limiting
amounts of TBP
protein.
We wanted to test whether egg extract is permissive to transcriptional
activation in the presence of all the factors required
for full
activation or whether the lack of activation is a dominant
property of
egg extract, one mediated by a repressor of activated
transcription.
For instance, NAT (negative regulator of activated
transcription), a
complex containing the human Srb10 and Med6
proteins, represses
activated transcription, while basal transcription
is facilitated
(
51). However, egg extract does not dominantly
repress
activation; HeLa cell extract confers the ability to activate
transcription to egg extract when these extracts are mixed (Fig.
3E and
G). Transcript synthesis is most efficient in a 1:1 mixed
extract,
which supports levels of transcription that are substantially
higher
than that of either extract alone. The addition of more
HeLa extract
results in loss of synergy and in repression of mainly
basal
transcription. When increasing amounts of egg extract are
added to a
fixed amount of HeLa extract, it appears that egg extract
inhibits
basal HeLa transcription without affecting the level
of activation (not
shown). Therefore, the lack of transcription
activation in egg extract
is not dominant over the activation
which is supported by HeLa cell
extract but rather is caused by
a functional deficiency in egg extract
(Fig.
3E and G). This functional
deficiency may involve either the
physical absence or a lack of
activity of a transcription cofactor(s).
In addition, the observed
capacity of the human HeLa cell extract to
stimulate transcription
in the frog egg extract indicates that this
putative human cofactor
also functions with the basal transcription
factors from
X. laevis.
We conclude that transcription
activation of the histone H2B promoter
is impaired in vitro,
independent of the levels of TBP that affect
basal
transcription.
Precocious translation of TBP mRNA stimulates transcription before
the MBT in vivo.
If exogenous TBP stimulates transcription before
the MBT by relieving a rate-limiting step, as suggested by the
chromatin-independent stimulation by TBP in vitro, one might expect
that precocious translation of otherwise masked TBP mRNA in the embryo
will actually stimulate transcription in the embryo. This would not
only provide evidence for the functional relevance of the translational
regulation of TBP but would also show that TBP does not necessarily
have to be prebound to the promoter for transcriptional stimulation in
this system.
Our initial attempts to inject a CMV promoter template, with or without
translationally competent TBP RNA and with or without
nonspecific DNA,
failed to reveal any stimulation of transcription
by TBP before the
MBT. However, it appeared that nonspecific DNA
not only titrates
chromatin assembly but also nonspecifically
inhibits the translation of
otherwise translationally competent
TBP mRNA. Therefore, we redesigned
the experiment (Fig.
4A) in
such a way that
TBP mRNA is injected into embryos at the one-cell
stage, whereas 1 h later (at the two- to four-cell stages) the
promoter template is
injected into one blastomere with or without
nonspecific DNA. This
allows for a 1-h time window in which the
TBP RNA is translated into
protein. Subsequently, total RNA was
isolated from cleavage stage
embryos (stage 4, ca. 1 h after injection
of DNA), early blastula
embryos (stage 7, ca. 3 h after injection
of DNA), and early
gastrula embryos (stage 101/2, post-MBT). CMV
promoter activity
was assayed by using primer extension, whereas
primer extension of
maternally loaded histone H4 mRNA served as
a control.

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|
FIG. 4.
Precocious translation of TBP RNA in embryos facilitates
transcription before the MBT, but embryos do not fully activate an H2B
promoter until well after TBP complementation of the basal
transcription machinery. (A) Synthetic TBP RNA (0.5 ng) was injected
into stage 1 embryos. Unlike endogenous TBP RNA, synthetic RNA is
actively translated before the MBT. After 1 h 0.5 ng of
double-stranded pCMV-CAT was injected into one blastomere of
two-cell-stage embryos, with or without 20 ng of nonspecific competitor
DNA (plasmid without eukaryotic promoter). Embryos were collected for
RNA isolation after 1-h, 3-h (25°C), or overnight (14°C)
incubation. A similar experiment was performed with oocytes. (B) Primer
extension of RNA isolated from embryos subjected to the experiment
described in panel A. "CMV" indicates the position of the primer
extension product of RNA initiated at the injected CMV promoter;
"H4" indicates the position of the primer extension product of
endogenous histone H4 RNA used as a primer extension control. A
quantitation of the primer extension products from the CMV promoter is
shown. The CMV promoter activity was normalized by using the relative
level of histone H4 RNA (see Materials and Methods). The results are
reproducible between experiments. Two bands are visible for CMV
transcription in the lanes containing TBP (lanes 4, 5, and 11); only
the lower band represents accurately initiated transcription. The
origin of the upper band is unknown. (C) Primer extension of RNA
isolated from oocytes subjected to an experiment comparable to the one
shown in panel B. At 3 h after injection of TBP RNA into the
cytoplasm, 0.5 ng of double-stranded pCMV-CAT was injected into the
nucleus, with or without 20 ng of nonspecific competitor DNA (plasmid
without eukaryotic promoter). Oocytes were collected for RNA isolation
after 1, 3, or 18 h. A quantitation is shown as in panel B. (D) Western blot analysis of TBP protein levels after
overexpression in embryos (lanes 3 and 4) or oocytes (lanes 5 and 6).
Endogenous TBP levels are shown in lanes 1, 2, and 5 (compare with Fig.
1). (E) Southern blot analysis of a chloroquine gel loaded with DNA
isolated from embryos and oocytes subjected to the experiment described
in panel A (compare panels B and C). This serves as a loading control
(comparable amounts of DNA in all experimental samples) and reveals the
DNA topology. The blot was labeled with a CMV-CAT-specific probe. The
asterisk shows the position of a cross-hybridizing band corresponding
to competitor DNA with a relaxed topology. (F) Activation of the
Xenopus H2B promoter as assayed with luciferase assays by
using the core promoter (TATA) and full-length promoter (H2B)
constructs (0.2 ng of DNA per embryo). Errors ± the standard
error of the mean are indicated. The difference between stage 9 and
stage 121/2 is statistically significant (P < 0.025). (G) DNA loading control of the experiments shown in panel
F. This shows that no significant differences exist in extrachromosomal
replication of the constructs during embryonic development.
|
|
The CMV promoter exhibits the normal developmental regulation observed
for class II genes when injected without TBP RNA or
nonspecific DNA
(Fig.
4B). Correctly initiated transcripts derived
from this promoter
first appear after the MBT (lane 3), whereas
these transcripts are not
detectable at stage 4 and 7 (lanes 1
and 2). If TBP mRNA is injected
prior to the DNA injection, a
weak and temporary signal corresponding
to correctly initiated
transcripts is detected at stage 4 (lane 4).
This signal, however
is lost at stage 7, before the normal post-MBT
transcriptional
signal is detected at stage 101/2 (lane 6). The
weak signal observed
at stage 4 apparently combines elevated TBP levels
(Fig.
4D) with
the relatively accessible promoter structure observed at
early
time points after injection of naked double-stranded DNA.
However,
a much more robust transcription before the MBT is observed
when
both TBP RNA was injected prior to DNA injection and nonspecific
DNA was coinjected with the promoter template (Fig.
4B, lanes
10 to
12). Under these circumstances it is not necessary for the
CMV promoter
to have TBP bound to it before injection into embryos
in order to be
transcribed. Without TBP RNA injected, nonspecific
DNA is not
sufficient to allow transcription from the CMV promoter
before the MBT
(Fig.
4B, lanes 7 and
8).
Because the levels of endogenous TBP protein are not only low in early
embryos but also in oocytes (Fig.
1A), we wondered
whether the
transcriptionally active oocyte would behave in the
same way as the
embryo does with respect to stimulation of transcription
by TBP and
nonspecific DNA. We therefore performed a similar experiment
with
oocytes. TBP RNA was injected into stage VI oocytes, and
the CMV
promoter template was injected with or without nonspecific
DNA 3 h
after RNA injection. RNA was isolated from oocytes after
1 or 3 h
or after overnight incubation of the injected oocytes.
Elevation of TBP
levels does not affect transcription in oocytes,
whereas nonspecific
DNA causes a mildly inhibitory

rather than
stimulatory

effect on
transcription (Fig.
4C). This result shows
that the strong correlation
that exists in early embryos between
transcriptional activity, TBP rate
limitation, and TBP protein
abundance comes into existence after the
transition from oocyte
to egg. If the stage VI oocyte is matured with
progesterone into
an egg, then repression of transcription is
established (
29).
Another observation is that transcripts
accumulate linearly with
time in the oocyte, whereas in the embryo (in
the presence of
TBP and competitor DNA) transcript levels reach a
steady state,
suggesting a greater role for RNA turnover in the embryo
compared
to the
oocyte.
As a control the DNA topology of the promoter template after injection
was examined by using chloroquine gel analysis (Fig.
4E). Nonspecific
DNA does titrate chromatin assembly as expected,
which manifests itself
as an increase in the relaxed fraction
of DNA when competitor DNA was
coinjected. TBP protein does not
affect the topology of the promoter. A
significant observation
is that the topology of the promoter template
in embryos in the
presence of nonspecific DNA (Fig.
4E, lanes 3 to 4)
is similar
to that of promoter template in oocytes without nonspecific
DNA
(Fig.
4E, lanes 5 and 8), whereas the promoter template in embryos
without nonspecific DNA shows a relatively strong supercoiling
without
a significant fraction of the DNA being in the relaxed
state. This
reinforces the fact that chromatin assembly in the
embryo is very
efficient and more repressive than that observed
in oocytes
(
29). In addition, the differences in transcriptional
activity cannot be attributed to differences in the amount of
DNA
injected in embryos or
oocytes.
In conclusion, precocious translation of TBP mRNA in embryos but not in
oocytes greatly enhances transcription in the presence
of nonspecific
DNA, and this stimulation of transcription does
not require TBP to be
prebound to the promoter prior to
injection.
Acquisition of transcription activation in pregastrulation
embryos.
Our experiments with the egg in vitro transcription
system suggest that activated transcription is regulated in a fashion that is mechanistically independent of translational unmasking of TBP
mRNA. It is known that some genes are transcribed ubiquitously at low
levels right after the MBT, before developmental stage and cell
type-specific expression is observed at the time gastrulation starts
(8, 40, 60). We therefore asked whether TBP complementation of basal transcription and competence for activated transcription are
regulated independently in vivo between the onset of zygotic transcription at the MBT and the onset of gastrulation. To address this
question, the TATA and H2B promoter constructs were injected into
fertilized eggs, and the promoter activity, as represented by the
luciferase activity, was measured at different time points after the
MBT (from stage 81/2 onwards). We used luciferase assays because
these are more sensitive than primer extension mediated detection of
promoter activity and because we wanted to examine transcription
activation very early after the MBT, when overall transcription levels
are very low.
Between stage 81/2 and stage 121/2, luciferase expression
driven by the H2B promoter increases by about 5 orders of magnitude.
Luciferase activity increases from an average of about 500 light
units
per embryo at stage 81/2 (integrated over the first 10 s)
to 4 × 10
6 light units per embryo at stage
121/2. Between stages 81/2 and 9
the increase in activity
of the TATA and H2B promoters is about
the same at each stage, which
means that the ability of the embryonic
transcription machinery to
activate transcription is limited (Fig.
4F), as it is in egg extract
(Fig.
3D). Between stages 9 and 10,
however, the activity of the
full-length H2B promoter increases
dramatically (ca. 170-fold), whereas
the basal promoter construct
increases significantly less (ca.
50-fold), representing a marked
increase in transcriptional activation
just before gastrulation
commences.
As a control, the injected DNA was isolated from the embryos at
different stages of embryonic development to ensure that the
different
activities observed were not due to differential replication
of the
constructs. Identical amounts of DNA were recovered from
the injected
embryos at each stage (Fig.
4G). Therefore, we conclude
that a
significant increase in transcriptional activation occurs
between the
MBT and the onset of gastrulation (Fig.
4F), the developmental
timing
of which is different from that of TBP accumulation between
early and
late blastula stages (compare Fig.
1A and
4F).
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have studied the molecular mechanisms that are underlying
transcriptional repression during early embryogenesis and relief of
that repression at the MBT. Our main conclusions are as follows. (i)
TBP is translated from maternally stored RNA just before the MBT. The
ratio of TBP to other basal transcription factors undergoes a major
transition during early embryonic development as a result of this
regulation. (ii) TBP is rate limiting for transcription before the MBT
both in vitro and in vivo, and precocious translation of synthetic TBP
RNA in the embryo facilitates transcription before the MBT in the
presence of nonspecific DNA. (iii) The transcription machinery of the
egg does not support activation of a H2B promoter above basal levels of
transcription, even though transcriptional activators are present in
the egg and are able to bind DNA. This lack of activated transcription
is also observed in the embryo and is only alleviated between the
MBT and gastrulation.
Developmental regulation of the embryonic transcription
machinery.
The data presented here shed new light on the earlier
work by Prioleau et al. (37, 38) and Almouzni and Wolffe
(3). From the present study it seems quite clear that major
deficiencies exist with regard to the early embryonic transcription
machinery, even independent of chromatin-mediated repression
mechanisms. Nevertheless, these chromatin-mediated repression
mechanisms are quite important for repression of the genome before the
MBT. Even in this study, we have not been able to see transcription
before the MBT without interfering with chromatin assembly in some way. In our in vitro experiments this was obtained by high template concentrations, such that nucleosome assembly by egg extract was virtually completely abolished. In the embryo this was, as in previous
studies, achieved by coinjection of competitor DNA and by assaying at
early time points after injection when chromatin assembly is far from complete.
An interesting question is how the repressive effects of chromatin and
the deficiencies in TBP and coactivators work together
to achieve full
repression before the MBT. One possible unifying
model that
historically has been considered entails a dynamic
competition between
histones and transcription factors for binding
to DNA. The observations
that seemed to suggest that this is true
were as follows. Preincubation
of the promoter template with recombinant
TBP protein results in a
transient basal transcription if the
promoter subsequently is injected
into the embryo (
37,
38).
This transient transcription by
TBP alone is sustained if nonspecific
competitor DNA (ca. 25 ng) is
coinjected. If large amounts of
competitor DNA are injected (ca. 80 ng
per embryo) transcription
is observed without any exogenous TBP
(
38). In these studies,
TBP and the promoter template needed
to be preincubated in order
to stimulate transcription. If recombinant
TBP protein and promoter
template are injected separately, TBP fails to
facilitate transcription,
suggesting that it needs to be prebound in
order to compete with
histones for binding DNA. However, the current
study suggests
a different interpretation of these data. If the
exclusion of
nucleosomes by TBP was the driving force of the
TBP-mediated stimulation
before the MBT, two predictions could be made.
The first is that,
in the absence of nucleosomes, additional TBP would
have no role
in stimulating transcription because the endogenous TBP
available
in the embryo would be able to sustain high levels of basal
transcription.
The second prediction is that TBP translated from
injected RNA
would fail to stimulate transcription in the embryo
because in
this experimental regime TBP is not prebound to DNA before
injection
into the embryo, which in the experiments with recombinant
protein
was found to be required for transcription. It appears that
either
prediction fails. If nucleosome assembly is titrated by high
amounts
of DNA in egg extract, such that transcription is observed
without
addition of exogenous TBP (Fig.
2), TBP still potently
stimulates
basal transcription (Fig.
3) in a fashion that is
independent
of additional competitor DNA. The other prediction fails as
well.
As shown in Fig.
4, TBP translated in the embryo can stimulate
basal transcription efficiently in vivo, without being bound to
the
template prior to injection. So the requirement to have TBP
protein
prebound to the template, which provided an argument in
favor of the
dynamic competition model, seems to be a peculiarity
of the use of
recombinant TBP rather than TBP RNA to achieve overexpression.
This may
be explained by differential mosaicisms of injected RNA
and protein,
respectively. In comparison with RNA, protein tends
to be more
localized at the site of injection (
9,
56a), such
that if
the promoter template is injected separately the injected
protein might
not be close to the DNA. Taking these data together,
repression by
chromatin and constraints imposed by TBP represent
distinct and
independent levels of regulation. Although the effects
of these
different levels of regulation are superimposed on each
other, the
mechanisms themselves are not interdependent and can
be uncoupled both
in vitro and in vivo (Fig.
3 and
4).
In addition to the insights in the nature of stimulation of
transcription by TBP provided by these functional studies, we
have
characterized the regulation of TBP mRNA, TBP protein, and
TBP
translation during early embryonic development. Western blot
analysis establishes a clear underrepresentation of TBP within
the
early embryonic transcription machinery (Fig.
1), a machinery
which is
functional in the absence of chromatin-mediated repression
(Fig.
2) and yet severely constrained, as revealed by the addition
of
exogenous TBP (Fig.
3 and
4). Therefore, TBP is rate limiting
before
the MBT, a condition alleviated by translation of stored
maternal TBP
RNA just preceding the MBT (Fig.
1). Currently, we
have no information
regarding the sequence of the
Xenopus TBP
mRNA outside the
coding region (
16). A specific dodecauridine
element in the
3' untranslated regions (UTRs) of Cl2 and activin
receptor mRNA has
been implicated in the embryonic polyadenylation
and translation of
these RNAs (
44,
45). The accumulation of
TBP from masked
maternal mRNA occurs well before that of components
of chromatin such
as histone H1 and Polycomb accumulate (
8,
13,
50).
Comparison of regulatory elements in the 3' UTRs
of these masked mRNAs
will be informative. The large subunit of
Pol II is also
translationally regulated (Fig.
1A). We have no
information, however,
on the expression of other subunits of RNA
Pol II. In addition it is
unclear whether limitation of components
of the basal transcription
machinery other than TBP also contributes
to transcriptional
constraint.
Not only is basal transcription regulated during early embryonic
development. We demonstrate that the ability to activate
a H2B promoter
is constrained in the embryo at the MBT, after
which this constraint is
substantially alleviated by gastrulation
(Fig.
4). Our in vitro
characterization of the pre-MBT transcription
machinery suggests that a
functional deficiency of cofactor(s)
is responsible for the absence of
activation before the MBT (Fig.
3). This deficiency is likely to affect
multiple
trans-acting
factors. It has been shown that
Xenopus oocytes and embryos contain
multiple maternally
derived transcription factors capable of binding
a histone H2B promoter
(
21,
22). Furthermore, in at least
one study, Gal4-VP16 has
been found to bind promoter DNA while
failing to activate transcription
in early embryos (
37). We
have been able to restore the
ability to activate a histone H2B
promoter at the MBT by injecting RNA
encoding a human cofactor
(
58a). Although we have no data on
the expression of the endogenous
coactivator in
Xenopus
embryos and although this particular cofactor
may not restore
activation to all promoters under these conditions,
the observation
that expression of a single coactivator causes
a robust and
reproducible stimulation of activated but not of
basal transcription in
stage 9 embryos is in concordance with
the in vitro data shown in Fig.
3. Evidently, the embryonic transcription
machinery is regulated, and
basal and activated transcription
are independently constrained and
potentiated, by TBP and (potentially
multiple)
coactivators.
Transcriptional regulation accompanying the early gastrula
transition.
Our studies indicate that transcriptional activation
of the histone H2B promoter initially is absent after the MBT; however, activation progressively increases through gastrulation. A number of
genes are known to be transiently transcribed at the MBT, irrespective of their normal spatial or temporal regulation (8, 40, 60). The mechanism underlying this developmentally regulated phenomenon most
likely is the appearance of the counteracting effects of chromatin-mediated repression of basal transcription and selective activation overruling such chromatin-mediated repression. For example,
the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A fails to stimulate
transcription before gastrulation, while it potently derepresses
transcription after gastrulation (1, 50). In the case of the
5S rRNA genes, the counteracting effects of repression and activation
are known to be mediated by histone H1 and the TFIIIA transcription
factor, respectively (5, 8). Another example is the
Xenopus MyoD gene, which is ubiquitously expressed after the
MBT before a positive autoregulatory loop is established in myogenic
cells at the onset of gastrulation (between stages 10 and
101/4), whereas in nonmyogenic cells MyoD is repressed by that
time (40). The accumulation of histone H1 contributes to that repression, since ablation of H1 accumulation induces ectopic MyoD
expression (49).
Interestingly, the developmental stage at which robust activation is
observed correlates with early gastrula transition (
24),
between stages 10 and 101/2, which represents a switch of
maternal
to zygotic control of cell cycle regulation (
24,
25,
32),
the switch of maternal to zygotic control of programmed cell
death
(
18,
47), along with the earliest detectable
endogenous apoptosis
(
19,
57), and the onset of gastrulation
itself. It is conceivable
that it is not just coincidence that
acquisition by the embryo
of full regulatory control of a variety of
developmental processes
occurs at a developmental stage at which the
embryo for the first
time is able to regulate gene expression from
complete silencing
to full activation. Our studies suggest that the
translation of
maternal TBP mRNA contributes to the
basal levels of transcription
observed for the first time at
the MBT, while full control of
gene expression may require the
embryo to complement its transcription
machinery with
coactivators.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank H. T. Marc Timmers, Peter C. van der Vliet, and J. Julian Blow for invaluable advice, suggestions, and reagents during early stages of this work.
This work was supported by a grant from the Dutch Organization for
Scientific Research (NWO).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory for
Molecular Embryology, NICHHD, NIH, Bldg. 18T, Rm. 106, Bethesda, MD 20892. Phone: (301) 496-4045. Fax: (301) 402-1323. E-mail:
awlme{at}helix.nih.gov.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, December 1999, p. 7972-7982, Vol. 19, No. 12
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