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Molecular and Cellular Biology, March 2002, p. 1288-1297, Vol. 22, No. 5
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.5.1288-1297.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,1 and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Pharmacy, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Korea2
Received 4 October 2001/ Returned for modification 14 November 2001/ Accepted 30 November 2001
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In higher eukaryotes, Cdk7 has been isolated as an RNA polII CTD kinase associated with basal transcription factor TFIIH (56, 62, 63) and also as a Cdk-activating kinase or CAK. CAK phosphorylates and thereby activates cell cycle regulatory Cdks such as Cdc2 (67), Cdk2 (24), Cdk4 (50), and Cdk6 (35). Most of the evidence for Cdk7 acting as a CAK comes from in vitro experiments, although some genetic experiments support this role (31, 37, 45). In S. cerevisiae, the physiological CAK is a monomeric 44-kDa protein kinase distantly related to Cdks, known as Cak1 or Civ1 (38, 71). Yeast Cak1 has been shown to phosphorylate multiple Cdk family members, activating both Kin28 and Cdc28 but not Pho85 or Srb10 (11, 17, 38, 41). No homologue of Cak1 has yet been discovered in higher eukaryotes, suggesting that Cdk7's role as a CAK may not be conserved throughout eukaryotes.
Cdk activity is modulated by at least two mechanisms (52, 53). The first is by association with regulatory proteins. Cyclins and other proteins bind the kinase subunit to increase activity and help determine substrate specificity. Many Cdks are also regulated by inhibitory proteins. A second mechanism of Cdk regulation involves a series of regulatory phosphorylations. Three phosphorylation sites have been identified on the prototypical Cdk, Schizosaccharomyces pombe cell cycle regulator Cdc2. Thr14 and Tyr15 can be phosphorylated by the Myt1 and Wee1 kinases to inactivate Cdc2; dephosphorylation by the Cdc25 phosphatase reactivates the kinase (52, 66). A third site (Thr169) in the "T loop" is phosphorylated by CAKs to greatly increase kinase activity. A number of phosphatases that dephosphorylate the T-loop threonine of Cdks have been identified (8, 29, 30). Phosphorylation of the T loop appears to be widely conserved in the Cdk family. Mutation of the activating threonine residue in Cdc28 (38, 71), Cdk4 (39), or Cdk6 (35) abolishes kinase activity and function in vivo. T-loop phosphorylation alters the Cdk substrate interface (57) and stabilizes the Cdk-cyclin interaction (16).
Yeast TFIIH subunit Kin28 contains residues corresponding to the three Cdc2 phosphorylation sites: T162, T17, and Y18 (12, 13, 26). Higher eukaryotic homologues of Kin28 (Cdk7) retain the T-loop phosphorylation site, but the two inhibitory sites are occupied by residues that cannot be phosphorylated. Thus Kin28 kinase activity is potentially regulated by (i) assembly with its cyclin partner Ccl1, (ii) T-loop phosphorylation by Cak1 (17, 41), (iii) other regulatory phosphorylations, and (iv) further association with other proteins such as Tfb3 and other subunits of TFIIH.
Electrophoretic analysis of Kin28 from wild-type cells shows that the protein migrates as a doublet and that the faster-migrating band disappears after phosphatase treatment (10, 17, 23, 41). The phosphorylation site responsible for this shift is T162 in the T loop (17, 41). Kin28 phosphorylation by Cak1 occurs at higher efficiency when Kin28 is in a complex with Ccl1 and Tfb3 (17). Surprisingly, Kin28 proteins with mutations at T162 support normal growth (41). A deleterious effect of T-loop phosphorylation is seen only when the T162 mutation is combined with other mutations in Kin28, Ccl1, or Tfb3 (this report; 17, 41). These results suggest that phosphorylation of Kin28 may be functionally connected to its interactions with other proteins.
Kin28 has been isolated within the nine-subunit holo-TFIIH complex as well as within a TFIIH-derived Kin28-Ccl1 dimer complex designated TFIIK (68). Yeast two-hybrid assays suggest that Tfb3 forms the link between the core and kinase modules of TFIIH by bridging Rad3 and Kin28 (19, 21). In higher eukaryotes, Cdk7 is found both in holo-TFIIH and in a trimer complex consisting of Cdk7, cyclin H, and Mat1 (the homologue of yeast Tfb3). This trimer complex can also associate with XPD/ERCC2, the homologue of Rad3 (15). These findings have led to the proposal that the Tfb3/Mat1 protein distribution differs in the yeast and mammalian systems: it is in both holo-TFIIH and the kinase subcomplex in higher eukaryotes but only in holo-TFIIH in yeast. Here we demonstrate the existence of a yeast Kin28-Ccl1-Tfb3 complex, thereby reconciling the yeast system with that of other eukaryotes. Interestingly, the T-loop phosphorylation of Kin28 is necessary for stable association with Ccl1 but only within the context of the TFIIH holocomplex.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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The Gal-inducible 2µm plasmids utilized for the examination of whether Ptc2 or Ptc3 is a Kin28 phosphatase were obtained from Mark Solomon [YepLac112Gal, YepLac112Gal*Ptc2, YepLac112 Gal*Ptc3, YepLac112Gal*Ptc2(D234A), YepLac112Gal*Ptc3(D234A), YepLac195Gal*Ptc2, YepLac195Gal*Ptc3] (8). The gene expressing His-tagged Tfb1 was transferred as an SpeI fragment from YCp50/Tfb1-6his (70) (a gift from Roger Kornberg) to pRS313.
Yeast strains, genetic manipulations, and media.
Yeast strains used in this study are listed in Table 1.
Strain YSB591, containing an episomal copy of the wild-type KIN28 gene on a URA3-marked plasmid and a deletion of the chromosomal KIN28 gene, was used for plasmid shuffling of KIN28. Yeast strains were transformed by the lithium acetate procedure (27). Standard methods for medium preparation, sporulation, and tetrad analysis were used (4, 28). Double-knockout Kin28
/Tfb1
yeast strain YSB722 was created by first shuffling pTS313-TFB1-6his into YSB207 and then mating the resulting strain to YSB591. The resulting diploid was sporulated, and tetrads were screened for the appropriate markers. Strains YSB760, YSB761, and YSB762 were created by plasmid shuffling of plasmids expressing HA-tagged wild-type Kin28 and the T162A and T162D mutants, respectively, into YSB722.
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HA-tagged Kin28 mutant proteins were immunoprecipitated from whole-cell extracts or chromatographic fractions using 12CA5 bound to protein A beads. Complexes were prepared by mixing 10 µl of protein A resin and 2 µl of 12CA5 ascites fluid per sample in Tris-EDTA (TE; pH 8.0) followed by incubation with gentle rolling for 30 min at 4°C. Beads were washed twice with 1 ml of TE (pH 8.0) and diluted 1:1 with TE (pH 8.0). Ten microliters of this mixture was then added to each yeast protein sample. Reaction mixtures were incubated with gentle rolling overnight at 4°C. Finally, beads were pelleted by centrifugation and washed three times in 1 ml of lysis buffer (20 mM HEPES [pH 7.6], 200 mM KOAc, 10% glycerol, 1 mM EDTA) prior to analysis by SDS-PAGE.
For
-phosphatase treatment, immunoprecipitations were performed as described above except that lysis buffer did not contain phosphatase inhibitors NaF and Na3VO4. Following two washes in lysis buffer, the beads were resuspended to 50 µl in lysis buffer supplemented with 50 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 mM Na2-EDTA, 5 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 0.01% Brij 35 (pH 7.5 at 25°C), 2 mM MnCl2, with or without
-phosphatase (200 U; New England BioLabs). Reaction mixtures were incubated at 30°C for 30 min and further analyzed.
Biochemical separation of Kin28 complexes.
Extracts were made from yeast strains containing both six-His-tagged Tfb1 and HA-tagged Kin28 (wild type and T162A and T162D mutants). The procedure for purification of TFIIH with BioRex-70 and a Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) column was modified from the procedure of Svejstrup et al. (69). Twelve liters of each strain was grown overnight in a fermentor and disrupted as described previously (59). All manipulations from this point on were performed at 4°C, and all buffers contained phosphatase and protease inhibitors. One-seventh volume of 4 M KOAc (pH 7.6) was added dropwise with stirring, and after 30 min the mixture was centrifuged in a Beckman 45Ti rotor at 40,000 rpm for 90 min. The supernatant (
120 ml) was removed and diluted with buffer A-0 (20 mM HEPES-KOH [pH 7.6], 20% glycerol, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT) until the conductivity matched that of buffer A-0.2 (buffer A plus 0.2 M KOAc) and then chromatographed on a 150-ml BioRex-70 (Bio-Rad) column equilibrated in buffer A-0.2. The column was washed with 200 ml of buffer A-0.2 and 400 ml of buffer A-0.4 before elution with 300 ml of buffer A-0.65. The peak protein fraction (
120 ml) was pooled and dialyzed against two 2-liter volumes of buffer A-0.2. The conductivity of the eluate was adjusted to match that of buffer A-0.2 before chromatography on a 50-ml phosphocellulose (Whatman) column equilibrated in buffer A-0.2. The column was washed with 50 ml of buffer A-0.2 and eluted with a 300-ml gradient of 0.2 to 1.0 M KOAc in buffer I (20 mM HEPES-KOH [pH 7.6], 20% glycerol, 0.01% NP-40, 0.2% Tween 20, 10 mM imidazole, 5 mM ß-mercaptoethanol). Fractions (3.5 ml) were collected from this gradient and subjected to immunoblotting analysis with antibodies against components of TFIIH (Kin28, Tfb3, Ccl1, and Tfb1). Two peaks were identified (see Fig. 5).
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In vitro CTD kinase assay.
Immunoprecipitated Kin28 complexes were used to phosphorylate recombinant glutathione S-transferase (GST)-CTD with [
-32P]ATP essentially as described previously (10, 40). Final concentrations per 25 µl of reaction mixture were 20 mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 7.6), 7.5 mM magnesium acetate, 2 mM DTT, 100 mM KOAc, 2% glycerol, 25 µM ATP, 0.5 µl [
-32P]ATP, and 100 ng of GST-CTD. Reaction mixtures were incubated at room temperature for 30 min, resolved on an SDS-12% PAGE gel, transferred to nitrocellulose, and exposed to X-ray film or a phosphorimager plate.
In vitro transcription assays. Assays were performed essentially as described previously (9, 76, 77) with minor modifications. One liter of each strain was grown overnight to mid-log phase and centrifuged, and pellets were washed twice with 500 ml ice-cold double-distilled water. All manipulations from this point on were performed on ice at 4°C, and all buffers contained protease inhibitors. The yeast pellet was resuspended in 2 ml of transcription buffer A (200 mM Tris [pH 7.9], 390 mM NH4SO4, 10 mM MgSO4, 1 mM EDTA, 20% glycerol, 2 mM DTT; note that this buffer A is different from that used in the TFIIH purification) per g wet weight and subjected to glass bead disruption. The lysate was collected and centrifuged in a Sorvall SS-34 rotor at 9,000 rpm for 20 min. The supernatant was collected, 1/7 volume of 4 M KOAc (pH 7.6) was added dropwise, and the resulting mixture was stirred on ice for 30 min. The mixture was centrifuged in a Beckman 45Ti rotor at 40,000 rpm for 90 min, and the supernatant was carefully collected, avoiding the pellet. An equal volume of saturated NH4SO4 (pH 7) was added dropwise with mixing, and the mixture was stirred for 30 min and centrifuged in a Beckman 70Ti rotor at 20,000 rpm for 30 min. The supernatant was discarded, and the pellet was resuspended gently in 50 µl of transcription buffer B (20 mM HEPES-KOH [pH 7.5], 10 mM magnesium acetate, 150 mM KOAc, 10 mM EGTA, 20% glycerol, 5 mM DTT)/g original wet weight. The resulting solution was dialyzed against two changes of 100 volumes of transcription buffer B for 4 h until the conductivity of the lysate was similar to that of the dialysis buffer. Lysates (30 to 60 mg/ml) were stored in aliquots at -80°C.
Transcription reaction mixtures (30 µl each) were assembled on ice and contained 12 µl of mixture A (25 mM HEPES-KOH {pH 7.8}, 10% glycerol, 100 mM KOAc {pH 7.8}, 10 mM Mg acetate {pH 7.8}, 5 mM EGTA, 2.5 mM DTT, 10 mM phosphocreatine {Sigma}, 1 U of creatine kinase {Sigma}, 10 U of RNasin {Promega}, 3 µl of deoxynucleoside triphosphate mixture {500 µM ATP and CTP, 10 µM UTP, 0.5 µl [
-32P]UTP [NEN-Life Science Products], 10 µM 3'-o-methyl-GTP [Amersham Pharmacia Biotech]}), whole-cell extract (200 µg), 100 ng of plasmid template (pCYC-GAL4 CG-), and 100 ng of activator (GAL4-VP16). Reactions were allowed to proceed at 25°C for 45 to 60 min and were terminated by the addition of 120 µl of RNase T1 buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 300 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 50 U of RNase T1), followed by incubation at room temperature for 15 min. SDS was then added to 0.5%, and proteinase K was added to 100 µg/ml, followed by incubation for 20 min at 37°C. Ten micrograms of tRNA was then added, and the reaction mixtures were extracted with phenol-chloroform and precipitated with ethanol. RNA was resuspended in 10 µl of 0.1% SDS in 50% formamide and resolved on an acrylamide gel. Gels were dried onto gel blot paper (Whatman) and exposed to X-ray film for autoradiography.
| RESULTS |
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The Kin28(T17D) mutant grew slowly under all conditions tested. This phenotype is unlikely to be due to loss of a regulatory phosphorylation because the T17E, T17V, and T17Q mutants grow normally (Table 2). Immunoblotting of the T17D strain shows that the mutant protein is present at levels equivalent to that for the wild type. Unlike what was found for the K36A mutant, overexpression does not partially suppress the growth defect conferred by the T17D mutant (Fig. 1B). In the Cdk2 kinase, phosphorylation of the site analogous to Kin28 T17 interferes with the ATP-binding site (52, 66). Therefore, we suggest that the aspartate residue in the T17D change mimics this inhibitory phosphorylation by interfering with the catalytic site of Kin28. In agreement with this hypothesis, phosphorylated-CTD levels are dramatically reduced in the T17D strain (55) (Fig. 1A) and Kin28 immunoprecipitates from T17D mutant cells are deficient in CTD phosphorylation (Fig. 2A).
T-loop phosphorylation of Kin28p.
In wild-type cells, two species of the Kin28 protein are resolvable by gel electrophoresis (Fig. 3A).
These represent phosphorylated and unphosphorylated proteins since treatment of the protein with
-phosphatase leads to loss of the lower band (17, 41) (Fig. 3B). The ratio of the proteins suggests that the majority of Kin28 in the cell is phosphorylated. Mutation of T162 in the Kin28 T loop leads to loss of the phosphorylated Kin28 band, providing evidence that this residue is the site of phosphorylation in vivo.
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This result was somewhat surprising, since T-loop phosphorylation has been found essential for the in vivo activity of several other Cdks. Although the T162 substitutions led to the apparent loss of the phosphorylated form of Kin28, we considered the possibility that the adjacent residue (serine 163) might also serve as a site of an activating phosphorylation. This seemed particularly plausible given that higher-eukaryote Cdk7 proteins contain two phosphorylation sites within the T loop (3). However, an S163A substitution produced no mutant phenotypes, either alone or in combination with the T162A substitution. Therefore, there is no indication that S163 can function as an alternate phosphorylation site.
It was previously reported that Kin28 immunoprecipitates from T162A cells had partially reduced in vitro CTD kinase activity (17, 41). Using a different extract procedure, we found that Kin28 immunoprecipitates did not show any marked defect in an in vitro CTD kinase assay (Fig. 2A). Furthermore, immunoblotting of extracts from T162 mutant cells revealed that in vivo levels of phosphorylated RNA polII CTD were roughly equivalent to that of the wild type (Fig. 1A). Therefore, under these conditions we did not find a requirement for T-loop phosphorylation in activating Kin28 kinase activity. A potential explanation for the apparent discrepancy between our results and those of Kimmelman et al. (41) is presented below.
It has been previously shown that the T162A substitution can be synthetically lethal when combined with a second substitution in Kin28 (41). To test whether this interaction was unique to the Kin28 double mutant created by Kimmelman et al., mutants with T162A/D in combination with T17D or K36A were created. All proteins with double mutations in these residues were unable to support viability (data not shown), indicating that T-loop phosphorylation becomes critical when Kin28 activity is limiting in vivo. Kin28(T162A) is also synthetically lethal in combination with a TFB3 mutant (41).
We also combined the Kin28(T162A) allele with alleles of CCL1 encoding amino-terminal truncations leading to slow growth (N
48 and N
54), resulting in synthetic slow growth and lethality, respectively (data not shown). Interestingly T162A also shows synthetic slow-growth interactions with a Ccl1 mutation (S52A-S53A) that removes potential phosphorylation sites identified in mammalian cyclin H (2). The homologous region of cyclin H is phosphorylated by Cdk8-cyclin C (Srb10/11), an event which negatively regulates the transcriptional activity of mammalian TFIIH (2). We found no evidence for this site being subject to phosphorylation in yeast (data not shown), but these serines may be important for Ccl1 interactions with Kin28.
Transcriptional activity of Kin28 mutants. Immunoblotting of whole-cell extracts showed that the mutants producing slow-growth phenotypes (T17D and K36A) have reduced levels of CTD phosphorylation in vivo (Fig. 1A). This reduction was shown to be a direct effect by immunoprecipitating Kin28 complexes from extracts and using them to phosphorylate a GST-CTD protein. Although all the mutants coprecipitated roughly equivalent levels of associated TFIIH subunits, the T17D and K36A mutants were severely defective for CTD kinase activity (Fig. 2A). Under these conditions, the T162 substitutions did not result in major defects in kinase activity, mirroring the lack of effect seen in vivo.
Whole-cell extracts from strains containing the Kin28 mutants were tested in an in vitro transcription assay (Fig. 2B). Basal and activated transcription was normal in all the mutant whole-cell extracts. Thus, although the T17D and K36A mutants are dramatically reduced in CTD kinase activity, this does not affect in vitro transcription. This result is in agreement with multiple studies that have failed to find a requirement for CTD phosphorylation in transcription in vitro (7, 61). However, several studies of yeast have shown that shifting some Kin28 temperature-sensitive mutants to the nonpermissive temperature results in a rapid drop in mRNA levels (10, 74). We propose two possible explanations for this apparent discrepancy. First, since Kin28 phosphorylation of the polII CTD is required for recruitment of RNA-processing factors (42, 55, 60), RNAs produced in vivo after inactivating Kin28 will not be capped, spliced, and polyadenylated properly. Such RNAs are rapidly degraded by several pathways (5, 34), and it is likely that this degradation contributes to the reduction in steady-state mRNA levels. This effect would not be seen in vitro. Second, the nature of the Kin28 allele tested is likely to be important. The temperature-sensitive alleles tested in earlier studies (10, 74) produce unstable mutant Kin28 proteins. In contrast, the Kin28(T17D) allele makes a catalytically defective but stable protein. Despite strong reductions in CTD phosphorylation at the promoter, normal levels of elongating polymerase are observed in the T17D mutant strain (42). Therefore, the presence of the Kin28 protein within TFIIH may be necessary for proper function of the complex in transcription initiation, although the kinase activity per se is not. Tirode et al. have previously suggested that it is the physical presence of CAK within TFIIH rather than its kinase activity that is required for optimal transcription (72). A similar situation has been found for Rad3; here the protein is essential for transcription although helicase activity is not (22).
Effect of Kin28 mutants on DNA repair. The TFIIH core subunits are utilized in both transcription and nucleotide excision repair (NER). It has been proposed that there are two TFIIH-like complexes: transcription is dependent on a holo-TFIIH containing Kin28-Ccl1, while NER is carried out by a "repairosome" containing the core TFIIH (but not Kin28-Ccl1) and several other proteins (58). Several studies suggest that core TFIIH may be reversibly redistributed between transcription and NER complexes following UV damage (1, 80). To test whether the T162 phosphorylation might serve as a signal for Kin28 dissociation following UV irradiation, wild-type and Kin28 mutant cells were subjected to increasing doses of UV irradiation and tested for viability. In marked contrast to TFIIH core subunit Tfb1 mutants with carboxy-terminal truncations (49), the Kin28(T162A) mutant exhibited no increased sensitivity to DNA damage (Fig. 4). The T17D and K36A mutants were also tested to determine whether the CTD kinase activity of Kin28 was important for DNA repair. Again, no differences compared to wild-type cells were observed. These results support the hypothesis that Kin28, like Ccl1 (73), is not involved in NER. This is in marked contrast to the UV sensitivity exhibited by subunits of core TFIIH (19, 20, 49, 70).
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To determine whether yeast contained a Kin28-Ccl1-Tfb3 trimer complex, Kin28-containing complexes were separated by ion-exchange chromatography over BioRex-70 and phosphocellulose. Two components of TFIIH were tagged: Tfb1 was fused to six histidines (69), and Kin28 was tagged with the HA epitope (10). The majority of the Kin28 protein eluted in the 0.65 M KOAc eluate on the BioRex-70 column, and this fraction was then resolved by gradient elution on phosphocellulose. Kin28 eluted in two peaks (270 to 330 and 450 to 600 mM KOAc), the second of which contained Tfb1 and other members of core TFIIH (Fig. 5; data not shown). Fractions from each peak (complexes I and II) were pooled and subjected to sequential affinity purification on Ni-NTA agarose and an anti-HA antibody column. The resulting eluates were subjected to immunoblotting for components of the TFIIH complex.
The Kin28 found in the fraction eluting at the higher salt concentration (complex II; 450 to 600 mM KOAc) from phosphocellulose was retained on the Ni-NTA column, indicating that it is in a complex with the histidine-tagged Tfb1. This was confirmed by immunoaffinity purification with anti-HA antibodies. Immunoprecipitates contained Kin28, Ccl1, Tfb3, and the Tfb1 proteins. Based on this result and other analyses, we assign this peak of Kin28 to the TFIIH complex.
The Kin28 fractions eluting from phosphocellulose at lower salt concentrations (complex I; 270 to 330 mM KOAc) did not contain core subunit Tfb1. This was in agreement with the finding that Kin28, Ccl1, and Tfb3 in this fraction were not retained on a Ni-NTA column. Silver staining of the anti-HA immunoprecipitate from the lower-salt fraction revealed three specific bands, which were found to correspond to Ccl1, Tfb3, and HA-tagged Kin28 by immunoblotting analysis (Fig. 6). The fact that all three proteins coprecipitated indicates that they are in a complex. Based on the copurification of these three proteins away from other core TFIIH subunits, we propose that this species may be analogous to the CAK complex isolated from higher eukaryotes.
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Effect of T162 phosphorylation within TFIIH and the trimer complex. Since Kin28 could be found in two distinct complexes, the role of T162 phosphorylation on each complex was tested after chromatographic separation. Complexes containing wild-type, T162A, or T162D Kin28 were purified as described above. The resulting TFIIH and trimer complexes were analyzed by immunoblotting and an in vitro CTD kinase assay. The distributions of Kin28, Ccl1, and Tfb3 between the two complexes were not affected by the T162 mutations during the phosphocellulose gradient chromatography (data not shown). However, during the anti-HA immunoprecipitation step it was noted that upon stringent washing the Ccl1 subunit was less stably associated with the TFIIH complex (Fig. 7). Both the alanine and aspartate substitutions at T162 produced a similar effect, indicating that aspartate, with a negative charge, cannot substitute for a phosphorylated threonine residue. Surprisingly, Ccl1 within the trimer complex did not appear to be similarly affected.
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We conclude that T162 phosphorylation regulates the affinity of the interaction between Kin28 and Ccl1. T-loop phosphorylation has been found to promote the association of other Cdk-cyclin pairs (16, 44, 48, 52). Interestingly, it has been previously noted that T-loop phosphorylation of Xenopus and mouse Cdk7 promotes in vitro interaction with cyclin H to activate the kinase within the dimer pair but becomes much less important within a Cdk7-cyclin H-MAT1 trimer (14, 25). Our results suggest that a differential sensitivity to T-loop phosphorylation between the trimer and TFIIH complexes also exists in vivo.
| DISCUSSION |
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Until now, it was not known whether S. cerevisiae contains a CAK-like trimer complex. A dimer complex of Kin28 and Ccl1 can be dissociated from TFIIH, and this has been designated TFIIK (69). It is not clear if this is a physiologically relevant complex in yeast, although a dimer complex can also be isolated from Xenopus extracts (48). We now report that yeast extracts contain a complex containing Kin28, Ccl1, and Tfb3 (the homologue of Mat1). We presume that this complex is a trimer, but we cannot rule out higher-order assemblies (e.g., hexamers) at this point. It appears that at least one-half of these proteins are found in the trimer complex. Since it apparently is not used for activation of Cdks, what is the role of this complex? One possibility is that the trimer complex is an evolutionary vestige that has been functionally replaced by Cak1/Civ1 in S. cerevisiae. In support of this idea, there is some evidence from S. pombe that both the Kin28 and Cak1 homologues can function as CAKs (47). It has also been shown that the mammalian trimer complex can inhibit in vitro transcription, although it is not clear whether this is a physiological function (6). Another possibility is that the trimer complex (in both yeast and higher eukaryotes) functions to phosphorylate other unknown substrates. Finally, the trimer complex may be an intermediate in the assembly of TFIIH, joining the core complex that is required for both transcription and DNA repair (70). To explore these possibilities, it will be necessary to find conditions or mutants that specifically affect the trimer complex but not TFIIH.
The discovery of the yeast trimer complex also provides some insight into the role of Kin28 T-loop phosphorylation. In agreement with other groups, we find that Kin28 is phosphorylated at threonine 162. We also tested whether serine 163 could serve as an alternative phosphoacceptor and found that it could not (data not shown). T162 phosphorylation is dependent on Cak1/Civ1 (11, 17). Interestingly, a recombinant trimer complex was preferentially phosphorylated relative to a Kin18-Ccl1 dimer (17). Substitution mutations at threonine 162 produce no apparent phenotype unless they are combined with a second mutation in Kin28 (this report; 17), Tfb3 (41), or Ccl1 (this report). Levels of phosphorylated RNA polII in Kin28(T162) yeast extracts are similar to those in wild-type extracts. In contrast to the mild in vivo effect of the T162A mutation, it has been reported that immunoprecipitates of Kin28(T162) are 75 to 80% defective for CTD phosphorylation. In apparent contradiction, we did not see a strong effect on in vitro phosphorylation by T162 mutant immunoprecipitates (Fig. 2). Several of our findings help resolve these apparent discrepancies. First, we find that TFIIH and the trimer complex are differentially sensitive to the T162A mutation. The mutant TFIIH complex is prone to loss of the Ccl1 subunit as well as CTD kinase activity (Fig. 7). Depending on the ratio of the two complexes within a particular extract, quantitatively varying results for total-extract immunoprecipitates would be expected. Furthermore, we found that the stringency of immunoprecipitate washing can affect Ccl1 association because under milder conditions the Ccl1 subunit can remain associated with the Kin28(T162A) mutant TFIIH (data not shown). When Ccl1 remains associated, CTD kinase activity is also maintained. Taken together, the available evidence indicates that T-loop phosphorylation stabilizes, but is not absolutely required for, the interaction between Kin28 and Ccl1. When other mutations in Kin28, Ccl1, or Tfb3 occur, this stabilization becomes critical.
Does the phosphorylation of Kin28 play a regulatory role or is it simply constitutive? Kimmelman et al. showed that there was no variation in Kin28 phosphorylation during the cell cycle. Also, the Kin28 T162 mutants are not hypersensitive to UV light (Fig. 4) (41), arguing that T-loop phosphorylation is not used to regulate the switch between the TFIIH transcription and DNA repair functions. The Ptc2 and Ptc3 phosphatases have been shown to dephosphorylate the T loop of Cdc28 (8), so they might also act on Kin28. Since T162A-T17D double mutants are inviable, we tested whether overexpression of phosphatases Ptc2 or Ptc3 would exacerbate the slow-growth phenotype of a T17D mutant. We saw no further decrease in growth rate and no change in the ratio of phosphorylated to unphosphorylated Kin28 (data not shown), arguing against a role for these phosphatases in regulating Kin28 activity. So far, there is no evidence to support a regulatory role for phosphorylation of the Kin28 T loop.
We also found no evidence for an inhibitory phosphorylation of Kin28 on threonine 17 or tyrosine 18. The analogous sites in S. cerevisiae Cdc28, S. pombe Cdk2, and some other Cdks are phosphorylated in vivo to down-regulate their kinase activities. In the process of constructing mutants with point mutations at these sites within Kin28, we discovered that a T17D mutation mimicked such a down-regulation. The mutant produced a stable protein with significantly reduced CTD kinase activity, resulting in slow growth. We have used this mutant Kin28 to show that CTD phosphorylation by Kin28 is necessary for recruitment of a capping enzyme to RNA polymerase (42, 55).
Several other mutations of Kin28 that change residues predicted to be key parts of the catalytic site were made. As expected, E54Q and D147N mutants did not support viability and did not have kinase activity. These two residues are thought to be part of the binding pocket for ATP-Mg2+ (36, 53). Lysine 36 is also predicted to be involved in coordinating the alpha phosphate of ATP. Surprisingly, we find that mutation of this residue to alanine results in destabilization of the Kin28 protein, arguing that it must in part play a structural role in the protein. A high-copy-number plasmid encoding the K36A mutant restores proteins levels, but the kinase activity of the mutant protein is still reduced relative to that of the wild type. Therefore, K36 probably functions in both protein stability and catalytic activity.
In conclusion, our data support the general model that T-loop phosphorylation of Cdks serves to stabilize cyclin association. Our identification of a Kin28-Ccl1-Tfb1 trimer extends the conservation of yeast and higher eukaryotes, yet raises new questions about the CAK/TFIIH difference among species. It remains to be determined whether the yeast trimer has a function in vivo. The yeast trimer efficiently phosphorylates the Rpb1 CTD and retains specificity for serine 5 within the heptapeptide repeat (not shown). Further studies will determine whether this complex plays a role in transcription independently of TFIIH.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work is supported by a grant from NIH to S.B. S.B. is a Scholar of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
| FOOTNOTES |
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