Affiliation:
1. Laboratory for Molecular Embryology, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, 1 and
2. Hubrecht Laboratory, Netherlands Institute for Developmental Biology, 3584 CT Utrecht, The Netherlands2
Abstract
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.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
75 articles.
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