Affiliation:
1. Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In vitro, the TAF
II
60 component of the TFIID complex contributes to RNA polymerase II transcription initiation by serving as a coactivator that interacts with specific activator proteins and possibly as a promoter selectivity factor that interacts with the downstream promoter element. In vivo roles for TAF
II
60 in metazoan transcription are not as clear. Here we have investigated the developmental and transcriptional requirements for TAF
II
60 by analyzing four independent
Drosophila melanogaster
TAF
II
60
mutants. Loss-of-function mutations in
Drosophila TAF
II
60
result in lethality, indicating that TAF
II
60 provides a nonredundant function in vivo. Molecular analysis of
TAF
II
60
alleles revealed that essential TAF
II
60 functions are provided by two evolutionarily conserved regions located in the N-terminal half of the protein. TAF
II
60 is required at all stages of
Drosophila
development, in both germ cells and somatic cells. Expression of TAF
II
60 from a transgene rescued the lethality of
TAF
II
60
mutants and exposed requirements for TAF
II
60 during imaginal development, spermatogenesis, and oogenesis. Phenotypes of rescued
TAF
II
60
mutant flies implicate TAF
II
60 in transcriptional mechanisms that regulate cell growth and cell fate specification and suggest that TAF
II
60 is a limiting component of the machinery that regulates the transcription of dosage-sensitive genes. Finally, TAF
II
60 plays roles in developmental regulation of gene expression that are distinct from those of other TAF
II
proteins.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
27 articles.
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