Affiliation:
1. Division of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Department of Oncological Sciences, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah Health Sciences Center, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Swi5 zinc finger and the Pho2 homeodomain DNA-binding proteins bind cooperatively to the
HO
promoter.
Pho2
(also known as
Bas2
or
Grf10
) activates transcription of diverse genes, acting with multiple distinct DNA-binding proteins. We have performed a genetic screen to identify amino acid residues in Swi5 that are required for synergistic transcriptional activation of a reporter construct in vivo. Nine unique amino acid substitutions within a 24-amino-acid region of Swi5, upstream of the DNA-binding domain, reduce expression of promoters that require both Swi5 and Pho2 for activation. In vitro DNA binding experiments show that the mutant Swi5 proteins bind DNA normally, but some mutant Swi5 proteins (resulting from
SWI5
* mutations) show reduced cooperative DNA binding with Pho2. In vivo experiments show that these
SWI5
* mutations sharply reduce expression of promoters that require both
SWI5
and
PHO2
, while expression of promoters that require
SWI5
but are
PHO2
independent is largely unaffected. This suggests that these
SWI5
* mutations do not affect the ability of Swi5 to bind DNA or activate transcription but specifically affect the region of Swi5 required for interaction with Pho2. Two-hybrid experiments show that amino acids 471 to 513 of Swi5 are necessary and sufficient for interaction with Pho2 and that the
SWI5
* point mutations cause a severe reduction in this two-hybrid interaction. Analysis of promoter activation by these mutants suggests that this small region of Swi5 has at least two distinct functions, conferring specificity for activation of the
HO
promoter and for interaction with Pho2.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
23 articles.
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