Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Chromatin creates transcriptional barriers that are overcome by coactivator activities such as histone acetylation by Gcn5 and ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling by SWI/SNF. Factors defining the differential coactivator requirements in the transactivation of various promoters remain elusive. Induction of the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae PHO5
promoter does not require Gcn5 or SWI/SNF under fully inducing conditions of no phosphate. We show that
PHO5
activation is highly dependent on both coactivators at intermediate phosphate concentrations, conditions that reduce the nuclear concentration of the Pho4 transactivator and severely diminish its association with
PHO5
in the absence of Gcn5 or SWI/SNF. Conversely, physiological increases in Pho4 nuclear concentration and binding at
PHO5
suppress the need for both Gcn5 and SWI/SNF, suggesting that coactivator redundancy is established at high Pho4 binding site occupancy. Consistent with this, we demonstrate, using chromatin immunoprecipitation, that Gcn5 and SWI/SNF are directly recruited to
PHO5
and other strongly transcribed promoters, including
GAL1-10
,
RPL19B
,
RPS22B
,
PYK1
, and
EFT2
, which do not require either coactivator for expression. These results show that activator concentration and binding site occupancy play crucial roles in defining the extent to which transcription requires individual chromatin remodeling enzymes. In addition, Gcn5 and SWI/SNF associate with many more genomic targets than previously appreciated.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
44 articles.
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