Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) eukaryotic transcription factors have the ability to form multiple dimer combinations. This property, together with limited DNA-binding specificity for the E box (CANNTG), makes them ideally suited for combinatorial control of gene expression. We tested the ability of all nine
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
bHLH proteins to regulate the enolase-encoding gene
ENO1. ENO1
was known to be activated by the bHLH protein Sgc1p. Here we show that expression of an
ENO1-lacZ
reporter was also regulated by the other eight bHLH proteins, namely, Ino2p, Ino4p, Cbf1p, Rtg1p, Rtg3p, Pho4p, Hms1p, and Ygr290wp.
ENO1-lacZ
expression was also repressed by growth in inositol-choline-containing medium. Epistatic analysis and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments showed that regulation by Sgc1p, Ino2p, Ino4p, and Cbf1p and repression by inositol-choline required three distal E boxes, E1, E2, and E3. The pattern of bHLH binding to the three E boxes and experiments with two dominant-negative mutant alleles of
INO4
and
INO2
support the model that bHLH dimer selection affects
ENO1-lacZ
expression. These results support the general model that bHLH proteins can coordinate different biological pathways via multiple mechanisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology